Economy
Related: About this forumThe robots are here. And they are making you fries.
The robots are here. And they are making you fries.
Meet Flippy, Sippy and Chippy, the newest technology stepping in to address a protracted labor crunch in food service
By Laura Reiley and Lee Powell
September 20, 2022 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
PASADENA, Calif.
At the end of July, a Jack in the Box in Chula Vista, Calif., got a new employee. He stood there for a couple of weeks while other workers swirled around him, jockeying between flat top and fryer, filling up paper sleeves with the tacos that the fast-food brand sells every year by the hundred million.
And then, having learned the ropes, he began to work, focusing exclusively on the fry station, dropping baskets of seasoned curly fries and stuffed jalapeños into vats of oil, eagle-eyeing when they were perfectly golden. He doesnt take breaks, never shirks when the boss isnt looking, wont call out sick or lean heavy on the company health insurance. But that doesnt mean he comes cheap. Flippy the Robot cost $50 million to develop, and cost Jack in the Box about $5,000 for installation and $3,500 per month for rental.
Restaurants have toyed with robotics for years, cropping up as early as 1983 when Two Panda Deli in Pasadena, Calif., used robots to schlep Chinese food from the kitchen to customers. There have been sushi-rolling robots and coffee-brewing robots and tiny drone iTray waiters: Often they are consumer-facing, a form of customer entertainment and value added to set a brand apart.
But now with restaurants facing a protracted labor shortage and robotic technology becoming both better and cheaper restaurant brands are doing new math. How long before an initial technology investment pays off? How long will it take to train human employees to work alongside robot co-workers? And, ultimately, how many restaurant jobs will be permanently commandeered by robots?
Roham Mactabi, system engineer at Miso Robotics, works on Sippy, the world's first POS-integrated automatic beverage dispenser and sealer.
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Editing by Sandhya Somashekhar, Monique Woo and Karly Domb Sadof.
By Laura Reiley
Laura Reiley is the business of food reporter. She was previously a food critic at the Tampa Bay Times, San Francisco Chronicle and Baltimore Sun. She has authored four books, has cooked professionally and is a graduate of the California Culinary Academy. She is a two-time James Beard finalist and in 2017 was a Pulitzer finalist. Twitter https://twitter.com/lreiley
By Lee Powell
Lee Powell is a senior video reporter at The Washington Post. He shoots, produces, writes and edits his own stories that appear on washingtonpost.com. Previously, he was based in the Washington bureau of the Associated Press and before that, he reported for the Dallas Morning News. Twitter https://twitter.com/leepowelltv
dweller
(25,093 posts)through the ranks pretty quickly.
Maybe they should plant a training robot in the GMs office for a few weeks, see how that goes
✌🏻
jimfields33
(19,029 posts)And they do a pretty damn good job. The employees who were cleaning the floors went to another department before they left For greener pastures.
Response to mahatmakanejeeves (Original post)
dweller This message was self-deleted by its author.
Shermann
(8,656 posts)I'm not overly optimistic looking at that photo.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)it's probably not going to be that popular an option in your average burger joint., where installation costs would be prohibitive.
And at some point, these things will break down and the results might burn the place down without fast human intervention. And these high tech options will most likely stay broken for some time as repair people will be understaffed and overworked, just the way we all have been for so long.
Robotics might transform large scale production, but I don't honestly see them eliminating that many jobs at restaurants, no matter how much the corporate C level executives hate paying their workers.
Auggie
(31,807 posts)NO FRIES FOR YOU!