This brings to mind a recent thought I had - our senses and intuition continue to be abstracted and delegated. It is especially humiliating when this delegation, which we must obey, is derived from data which we are unable to comprehend or perceive.
Manna has been a reality for more than a decade. Practically the entire warehousing industry uses a fully automated voice system that's almost exactly as Brain describes. An increasing number of retailers are using headset communication with both human and automated elements - your headset receives voice messages from co-workers, managers and automated systems.
Voice picking is already being rapidly supplanted by human-less (robotics) processes. If the cost of implementation for these systems ever dips low enough then a terrible number of warehouse jobs are going to disappear nearly overnight.
That's how the previous generation of Amazon warehouses worked, with pickers wearing headgear that told them where to go. Now that part is done with robots, which bring the shelves to the pickers.
I mean everyone already has turn-by-turn directions emanating from their pocket, so that's a point in favor of your argument.
I'd imagine they'd (also) want to create their own "actual location" address book.
The USPS isn't set up to or interested in compiling that info for anyone, and first responders don't think anyone else needs access to their data.
> I mean everyone already has turn-by-turn directions emanating from their pocket
Navigating the map is a problem already solved. Knowing what a delivered package looks like on a doorstep is not, knowing how to interact with any individual waiting for the package is not, etc.
> I'd imagine they'd also want to create their own "actual location" address book.
Good call! Another to add to the list.
We're talking about Amazon here, right? A company known for maximizing efficiency and resources. Why wouldn't they use this sensory device to work towards this goal?
One other benefit would be for the confirmation images that drivers take of a delivery. Rather than schlepping out a phone, they just tap their glasses as they put a package down. Much less hassle and I think would shave time.
It made the headlines in 2017 and sort of became a meme, but in practice, indiscriminately avoiding left turns in routing can lead to huge inefficiencies.
In my city, trying to avoid one left turn may mean taking 3-4 block detour due to one-way streets. It may decrease fuel usage, but it increases delivery time, and if I'm not mistaken, for most carriers, driver time costs more than price of fuel.
The medium is the message