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Search the Community: Showing results for tags 'robots'.

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  1. TacoCopter: One-click Taco Delivery in the SF bay area You want tacos. You want them fast. Also, you think quadricopters are pretty sweet. Enter: TacoCopters Ordering your tacos is pretty simple. Just open TacoCopter on your iPhone, order your tacos, and a flying “tacocopter” will deliver them to you, fast. It uses your iPhone’s location to find you, so you don’t have to waste time entering an address. The TacoCopter doesn’t have to deal with traffic, so it can take the most direct route. It only asks that you “Please stay stationary” once you order. The TacoCopter won’t follow you around. It has better things to do. Namely, deliver tacos. A delivery revolution Can you imagine having other flying copter delivery services? LobsterCopter, the “Taco Of The East” is in the works. Currently, there’s not much there: the site sports an 80 x 80 pixel image of developer Sean Coates, and that’s it. The site is registered under Chris Shiflett, a founding member of Analog, a website creation service. And for the moment, that’s all we know about LobsterCopter. What other quadricopter delivery services do you want to see? Update: Good news — Dustin Boyer, co-founder of TacoCopter, claims that the TacoCopter really does exist. Over on social networking site Quora, he says, "Yes, we're definitely real There are a number of technical and legal hurdles that our team is working through. If you're interested in pushing the boundaries of robotics and food please email jobs@tacocopter.com." Update: Bad news — Star Simpson, co-founder of TacoCopter, told Wired that the TacoCopter is just "a vision." FAA regulations won't allow such a magical machine to be used, so Simpson, Boyer, and company just created the site to keep the idea alive. "We're in a holding pattern until the FAA changes regulations on commercial drones in cities. Even then, there are state and local laws to contend with. Until laws catch up with (delicious) technology, this is a just for fun thing with our friends," Boyer told us in an email. "We have a vision of the future where all foods, not just tacos, can be delivered via deadly flying robots." Wired reports that if a TacoCopter actually does become reality, those who entered their email in the TacoCopter site will be notified. In the meantime, they will not be selling our emails to spam companies. Good news.