Walmart Is Offering This for the First Time Ever
Walmart, the world'd largest retailer, is always on the cutting edge of where shopping meets technology. And their latest announcement might have you feeling like we're closer to the future that The Jetsons envisioned than ever before. Walmart just revealed they'll start to use fully driverless trucks to make deliveries as early as next year. Shoppers using Walmart's online services in certain trial areas will receive their deliveries via a fully autonomous box truck. Read on for more on this futuristic change, and for another update from Walmart, check out why Walmart Is Doing This Again as COVID Surges.
The new endeavor is the result of a partnership between Walmart and Gatik, a start-up based in Palo Alto and Toronto. Gatik has created multi-temperature box trucks outfitted with the software and sensors that enable the vehicles to move and navigate safely without the need for a human driver. Over the past year, trials have been ongoing with the trucks working on a two-mile route between a Walmart "dark store" (a center that holds items for online dispatch but isn't open to the general public) and a location in Bentonville, Arkansas, where the brand is headquartered. During these tests, the vehicles have driven autonomously but have had a human safety driver on board, and have notched up 70,000 miles in deliveries so far.
Following the successful trial, the intention is that Walmart and Gatik's trucks will go fully driverless beginning next year. "This achievement marks a new milestone that signifies the first ever driverless operation carried out on the supply chain middle mile for both Gatik and Walmart," Tom Ward, Walmart's senior VP of customer product, said in a company statement.
At the same time, the program will be expanded to a new location in Louisiana, where trucks with safety drivers will start carrying out deliveries from a regular Walmart store to a designated pickup location where customers can collect their online purchases.
As well as this trial, Walmart is working with other driverless vehicle companies including Waymo, Cruise, and Ford to find which operator best suits its needs. "Our trials with Gatik are just two of many use cases we're testing with autonomous vehicles, and we're excited to continue learning how we might incorporate them in a delivery ecosystem," Ward said in his statement. "With 90 percent of Americans living within 10 miles of a Walmart, a closer store isn't always the answer. Perhaps it's just a pickup location, with an autonomous vehicle making deliveries on a constant loop."
With customers ordering more supplies to their homes and many reluctant to physically visit stores during the pandemic, Walmart has been expanding its online operations. The chain's Walmart+ program, which launched in Sept. 2020, is one of its biggest developments. Read on for more on what the service offers, and for a warning from the superstore, beware that If You Bought This From Walmart, Get Rid of It Right Now.
Read the original article onĀ Best Life.