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Delivery robots move medical supplies to help with COVID-19 response, Ars Technica

Delivery robots move medical supplies to help with COVID-19 response, Ars Technica

      Coronavirus –

             

The road-legal robots will be limited to 5 miles per hour for safety reasons.

      

       Apr , 2020 4: 06 pm UTC

           

Nuro, one of the nation’s best-funded self-driving vehicle startups, has begun using its robots to ferry food and medical supplies around a California stadium that has been converted into a coronavirus treatment facility, CEO (Dave Ferguson announced

Since then, Nuro has shifted its delivery service from Tempe to Houston and developed a new robot, the R2. In February, the federal government gave Nuro some special exemptions to omit features — like rearview mirrors — that make no sense in a vehicle with zero occupants, clearing the way to use the vehicles on public roads.

Nuro had planned to start using the R2 in Houston around now. But at the last minute, the company put those plans on hold to focus on the medical supply project. Estrada told Ars that Nuro isn’t doing any robot deliveries in Houston right now. Instead, the company is delivering groceries for Houston-area Kroger stores using its fleet of modified Priuses, with a safety driver behind the wheel of each car.

A Nuro spokeswoman told Ars by email that Nuro “aims to roll out the use of its R2 vehicles” with partners in Houston ” in the coming weeks. ” In addition to Kroger, Nuro also has partnerships with Walmart and Dominos. “We will start operations with a chase car initially, with the intention to move to full autonomy shortly thereafter,” the spokeswoman said.

Delivering medical supplies is obviously a worthwhile goal, but I wonder if Nuro’s grocery delivery business might ultimately be more helpful in a post- coronavirus world. Nuro’s robots are too big to operate inside conventional hospitals, so the potential market for Nuro’s robots might be fairly small here. At least one of Nuro’s rivals with smaller robots, Kiwibot, is also experimenting with delivering medical supplies.

By contrast, there’s massive unmet demand for delivery of groceries and other essential items to people homes, and contactless deliveries are a huge selling point there, too. Nuro’s robots are bigger and faster than robots from other delivery startups, which could allow them to serve areas where the smaller robots aren’t practical.

On the other hand, the size and speed of Nuro’s robots also make it a bigger engineering challenge to operate them without human supervision, compared to sidewalk delivery robots. Companies like Kiwibot and Starship have had their robots operating without direct human supervision for more than a year now. Nuro says it will be able to do the same thing soon, but we’ll have to see when that actually happens.

                                                

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