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3 votes
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As coronavirus spreads, some Beijing bookstores have partnered with a food delivery service to get books to readers
6 votes -
The American restaurant is on life support
10 votes -
DoorDash made its couriers agree to binding arbitration, and now a federal judge has ordered them to pay almost $10 million to arbitrate over 5000 claims filed by couriers
10 votes -
How bad is the environmental impact of shipping/delivery?
I've recently started trying to improve my environmental impact, so I apologize for what might be a very basic question, but how bad is it to have items shipped/delivered to you, rather than...
I've recently started trying to improve my environmental impact, so I apologize for what might be a very basic question, but how bad is it to have items shipped/delivered to you, rather than picking them up from a store near you?
I'm specifically interested in two situations:
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If I'm buying a specialty, zero-waste product that's not available in stores nearby, which is worse: having it delivered directly to my house, or having to drive a good distance in my own car to get it? Are the two roughly comparable, or is one considerably worse than the other?
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I use a service called PaperBackSwap that is sort of like a big, distributed, online used bookstore. You give away books from your collection to people who request them, and for each book you send out you can request one to be sent to you. I like that it's putting books in the hands of people who specifically want them (as opposed to donating them or selling them to a used bookstore where they might be shelved indefinitely or pulped), but now I'm sitting here wondering how bad it is for that single hardcover of mine to travel halfway across the country. On the other hand, the book is getting reused, potentially multiple times if it then gets requested by others after that. Should I be considering this good reuse, or a waste of resources?
Outside of those two, I'd welcome any primers on the topic at large, as well as any best practices with consumer goods that I can start putting into place. I've already done a lot to find plastic-free alternatives to a lot of what I use, but I don't know if I'm trading one ill for another by getting them from places that have to send them from hundreds of miles away.
11 votes -
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I sold microwave meals on Deliveroo
10 votes -
The next big thing in dining: virtual restaurants
5 votes -
DoorDash data breach - Affects approximately 4.9 million consumers, Dashers, and merchants who joined before April 6, 2018
12 votes -
Amazon will order 100,000 electric delivery vans from EV startup Rivian, Jeff Bezos says
6 votes -
Google's Wing will test deliveries using drones from FedEx Express, Walgreens, and Sugar Magnolia in Christianburg, Virginia
6 votes -
DoorDash commits to changing their tipping model after renewed uproar
13 votes -
Grubhub is using thousands of fake websites to upcharge commission fees from real businesses
21 votes -
Amazon created an exceptionally-detailed virtual clone of a neighborhood to train and test its delivery robots
7 votes -
Walmart wants employees to deliver products to your fridge - Available in three cities this fall
11 votes -
What it’s like working as an Amazon Flex delivery driver
5 votes -
Worked to death at FedEx
9 votes -
The super-fast logistics of delivering blood by drone
3 votes -
Instacart and DoorDash’s tip policies deliver outrage
8 votes -
Amazon unveiled Key for Garage—a system that allows Amazon drivers to unlock garage doors to make secure deliveries.
15 votes -
Instacart and Amazon-owned Whole Foods are parting ways
6 votes -
Are dark kitchens the satanic mills of our era?
7 votes -
'Parasites': Restaurants ask customers to shun services like Uber Eats
11 votes -
Foodora announced on Thursday it would stop operating in Australia by the end of August
2 votes -
New Vermont legalization law sparks 'gift' delivery service
4 votes -
New Deliveroo contract shifts liability for undelivered food to riders
3 votes -
Deliveroo threatens to terminate workers after losing their contracts
1 vote -
Foodora dishes out punishment to injured riders in 'oppressive' policy, ABC investigation reveals
2 votes -
A Foodora delivery rider is facing a test case at the Fair Work Commission that will determine whether food delivery riders are really employees
5 votes -
Talk to Deliveroo couriers. See a dystopia that could be your future – the realities facing the ‘contractors’ are grim. No wonder their union is appealing to the high court
9 votes