DoorDash, the most popular food delivery app in the United States, is testing its very own delivery robot. Called Dot, the bot is a small, red vehicle that braves roads, bike lanes, and sidewalks at ...
The global Electric Transporters Market, valued at USD 58.5 billion in 2025, is projected to more than double to USD 118.3 billion by 2035, growing at a CAGR of 7.3%. With battery electric vehicles ...
The 350-pound bot is built to haul food, groceries through suburban streets and bike lanes at up to 30kmph, but questions remain over safety, cyclists’ space ...
DoorDash is making its biggest push yet into robotics and automation, unveiling a delivery robot and a new tool for restaurants as part of a strategy ...
Autonomous vehicle company Avride said in a recent court filing that it denies the claims made in an Austin man's lawsuit against it, and has requested a jury decide the case's outcome.
Dot, a robot that can traverse bike lanes, parking lots and sidewalks, opens up an untapped logistics model alongside a new autonomous delivery platform.
While Europe experienced declines due to economic slowdowns, growth is anticipated as Asia Oceania and North America lead recovery efforts supported by better infrastructure. Class-I e-bikes remain ...
The PNY Ponie P2, an electric cargo motorcycle built for serious utility work, has just completed a wide-ranging pilot ...
Today, DoorDash unveiled Dot, its first autonomous delivery robot. The company said it built Dot to travel on bike lanes, roads, sidewalks, and driveways to perform local deliveries.
DoorDash Inc., the largest food-delivery app in the U.S., unveiled a delivery robot and a smart scale for restaurants, showcasing the company’s years-long effort to develop hardware.
DoorDash co-founder Stanley Tang showed off the four-wheeled autonomous robot, named Dot, at a gathering Monday for reporters at the company’s San Francisco headquarters. Dot stands 4-foot, ...
Priory School hit all the right notes this week, when a beautiful new piano was donated.The grand instrument didn’t arrive by truck, van, or lorry though, instead finding itself strapped to the back ...