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Amazon Prime is a great service for purchasing a variety
of products. Except small
cheap things - button batteries, headphone plug
splitters,
paper clips, etc. They tend to bump up to at least the $5
range to cover the real cost of shipping, which is often
multiple times their value. The
trick
is finding a way to deliver these products relatively
quickly that doesn't cost more in shipping than the
product is worth.
Alternatively, bundle the item with something that is
worth
the cost of shipping. Amazon has its "Add On Items"
category for this, but then you're stuck waiting until you
need a >$20 item before you can order. If only there
was a
relatively expensive item people needed ever day. Hey
wait, food!
Pizza & Small Things is a pizza place that also has a
large
selection of commonly used small cheap things. Order a
pizza, and delivery of small things is free.
Amazon shipping
http://www.engadget...ight-shipping-game/ [theircompetitor, Jan 15 2016]
It works for Coca Cola - why not Pizzas ?
http://www.wired.co...2013-03/28/colalife Semi Baked (the idea, not the Pizza :-) ) [monojohnny, Jan 18 2016]
Dilbert
http://dilbert.com/strip/2014-05-16 Eerily accurate... [8th of 7, Jan 19 2016]
Baker Island
https://en.wikipedi...g/wiki/Baker_Island Not half... [8th of 7, Jan 19 2016]
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I would use this [+]. And not just pizza places, but all these newfangled delivery companies popping up that deliver for all kinds of 3rd party restaurants. Their drivers keep an inventory in the trunk and their website offers this stuff for sale along side the restaurant food. |
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// The small things like staples and nuts and bolts won't end up being toppings right ? // |
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We suspect that will be very much dependent on the generosity of your tip to the delivery driver last time ... |
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Also, a franchise idea for those of us who live outside of pizza delivery areas: Pizza and Small Things by Boat/Float Plane. |
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Wonder if I'd be able to get container shipping on Prime |
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Taken to it's extreme, the Uber driver will show up and drop off a pizza and a cable at your neighbors before taking you to your destination. |
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// Taken to it's extreme // |
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That's not so extreme really. |
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Eventually it will be a driver-less car that drops off the
pizza and picks you up. 99% of cars will be not be
personally owned and you'll simply request transport of X
object and Y people and pay a small fee (cheaper than
owning and operating your own car). Depending on the
priority selected, an appropriate vehicle will show up 30
seconds to half an hour later. |
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Oh yeah. (Hi World...Happy 2016 to you!) |
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When I first heard of the "Internet of THINGS", It was something like this I thought it must be. Sigh ! Hope they have a pizza the Doctors will let me eat, not one that tastes good. |
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[scad] We're most of the way there already. Uber
delivers restaurant food, I've been using Car2Go
for years (find it with an app, hop in and drive).
The restaurant food I ordered on the Amazon app
arrived in 15 minutes. |
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The only thing this future we're living in is missing
is small things. And apparently shipping container
/ ferry delivery (when did all of the 'bakers move
off to their own islands?!). |
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You will desperately need a scale to weigh yourself and
family/friends. |
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// when did all of the 'bakers move off to their own islands?! // |
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Not long before the techno-singularity that wiped out all purely organic life on your planet <link>, since when you consciousnesses are in fact just software simulations running on a massive distributed network (except for us, of course) in a highly realistic "Second Life"-type environment. |
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Actually, it's not really that realistic, but of course your code is written so that you don't notice... |
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Yes, Baker is an island. <link> |
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(More of an atoll, actually). |
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