If an LLM can’t be trusted with a fast food order, I can’t imagine what it is reliable enough for. I really was expecting this was the easy use case for the things.

It sounds like most orders still worked, so I guess we’ll see if other chains come to the same conclusion.

  • Etterra@discuss.online
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    5 hours ago

    After hearing about this I now want to go up to AI menu board at my local Wendy’s and order 17x10³¹ triples burgers.

  • LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    One day in 2012 at McDonald’s drive thru, talking to a real human on site through the speaker just like the good old days, I ordered

    “A Filet o’ Fish.”

    Imagine my surprise at the dollar total and when they handed me a bag of

    EIGHT Filet o’ Fish.

  • pruwyben@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 day ago

    Since 2023, the fast-food chain has introduced the technology at over 500 locations in the US, with the aim of reducing mistakes and speeding up orders.

    Bullshit, they just want to save money by replacing employees with AI.

    • End-Stage-Ligma@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Step 1: replace all your workers with AI Step 2: set new record for unemployment Step 3: most people can’t afford your product Step 4: increase the price to compensate for decreasing sales Step 5: blame Obama

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        Step 1: Replace your executive and board members with LLMs. Despite LLMs being increadibly unintelligent, there will be no loss of leadership IQ in the corporation because they were already unintelligent enough to put a LLM where it doesn’t belong because they don’t understand what it is and what it isn’t.

        Step 2: Enjoy the savings of those large useless eater salaries you no longer have to pay.

    • thebudman420@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      They don’t even reduce cost from the savings. They charge the exact same amount until they want to increase prices.

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    This is a problem that requires zero AI.

    A touchscreen kiosk is all you need to have the customer place their own order. You just need to have 2-3 ordering stations as they will be slower than trainer staff.

    But shareholders demand AI

      • Resonosity@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 hours ago

        People use touchscreens for accessing ATMs in the States.

        Don’t see why this couldn’t be possible for fast food. There’s proven technology that already exists

        Edit: Just to add, fuck cars. And fuck anti-urban infrastructure. Maybe we should do away with touchscreens for fast food, as well as other pro car infrastructure. At least not incentivize it

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          5 minutes ago

          People use touchscreens for accessing ATMs in the States.

          Have you ever noticed how frequently they end up partially opening the car door and leaning out in order to reach (either because of a mismatch between screen height and car window height, or because they didn’t have the precision driving skills to pull in close to the machine without hitting it)? It’s pretty often, just sayin’. But yes, it could be done the same way for fast food.

          On a related note, I kinda miss the old pneumatic tube systems banks used to use, despite them being car-centric.

      • FoxyFerengi@startrek.website
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        Man, I never used fast food, or drive throughs as much as I have since I developed a mobility disorder. Last week I put a pickup order in at my local coffee shop out of habit, and couldn’t carry both my coffee and the breakfast sandwich to my car at the same time. Which sounds so stupid, but it took so much extra energy for both trips into the store that I was ready to go home and call it a day after that lol

        I know the answer is “don’t get fast food and just eat at home”, but I’ve also been so tired after work/school that I’m not eating, and I dunno what the answer to that is either. My state isn’t a place where people think about how to care for their communities, and most of it has hours of highway between “cities”

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          I know the answer is “don’t get fast food and just eat at home”

          No it’s not. Well, at least not in terms of urbanism/mobility, anyway; YMMV on your household budgeting.

          The answer is that you shouldn’t have to get in a car at all between your home and your local coffee shop to begin with. It should be no more than a short walk (or wheelchair ride or whatever), door to door.

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            1 day ago

            It’s a mile, and across an interstate exit, to my nearest bus stop. And I live in the only city in the enormous state that takes public transportation seriously.

            I think I feel bad when I read articles like the ones you posted, before this I’d cross the distances and not think much of it because my last two cities didn’t have public transportation. Now I can’t cross fast enough to beat the crossing light, and it’s so incredibly unsafe if I fall. I feel like the problem, I guess

            • grue@lemmy.world
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              It’s a mile, and across an interstate exit, to my nearest bus stop. And I live in the only city in the enormous state that takes public transportation seriously.

              Your first sentence contradicts your second. Clearly, there are zero cities in your enormous state that take public transportation seriously.

              It’s crazy how most Americans have absolutely zero concept of just how bad even “good” infrastructure and city design in the US is, or how much better it could be.

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                1 day ago

                They do not contradict each other. I’m certain there will be more stops as the city grows, because they keep improving it. I used to live in a city, in another state, with one of the best public transportation systems in the country, and they also kept improving that system to include the surrounding cities in other counties. Just because something isn’t perfect already does not mean we can’t take it seriously and strive for perfection

      • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        God damn. I was just about to invite you to the fuck cars community. In doing so, I needed the like with the !.

        In trying to find it on the sidebar, I see you’ve found that community. As a mod.

        Which means the whole basis for my comment is void before I even typed it!

        On a similiar note…can you put the ! link in the sidebar?

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          18 hours ago

          LOL, guilty as charged!

          On a similiar note…can you put the ! link in the sidebar?

          If it’s the best solution to your problem, sure! But is it?

          There’s nothing specific to !fuckcars about your request, so I’m not sure individual action by me is the right answer. Do you know of any examples of other communities that do the same? Have you made a thread somewhere like !lemmy_support@lemmy.ml or !fediverse@lemmy.world proposing it as a standard convention? Have you filed a feature request suggesting that the built-in community link at the top of the sidebar be changed to display the fully-qualified name with exclamation point, or that a button be added next to it to copy the correct text to your clipboard, or something like that?

        • betterdeadthanreddit@lemmy.world
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          I’m not sure which mobile clients have this feature but with a browser, you can just type ! and the first couple letters of the community name. It’ll start offering suggestions to choose from and narrow those down as you keep writing out the name. Making a selection fills in the rest of the link markdown for you.

    • GenosseFlosse@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      Also software voice recognition and using this for a shopping cart/order placement system (via phone line) has been a thing since the early 2000s, i know some mail order shops in Germany who used this.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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      I actually don’t know why entering your own order hasn’t taken off more, come to think of it.

      • P00ptart@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Chick-fil-A even went the other way, putting 4 high schoolers out in the weather for it. Cold, hot, raining, doesn’t matter.

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        1 day ago

        That’s how my local Taco Bell is. If you don’t use your phone to place the order when you walk in there’s four kiosks you walk up to for placing your order. None of the people working are working the counter.

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        Most people have a hard enough time getting their car close enough to the window to get the food or to handle the card reader. I doubt many people would enjoy the toucn screen ordering as the would struggle tk get close enough and may have to lean way out of their window to order. The touch screen would also have to work reliably while wet or freezing cold.

        Then you’ve got the issue of someone has to clean it and even with regular cleaning it has a huge potential to spread germs. Ultimately with all the disadvantages i think it would be too slow, too inconvenient, and add extra real estate to the drive thru.

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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          Yeah, I guess you’d need some kind of arm or something to put the screen across. And then I guess you’d have to worry about it being damaged. Meanwhile, hiccups aside, an LLM is pretty much a drop-in solution.

  • yesman@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    This is not AI failing to do an easy job. This is “unskilled” labor doing complex and demanding work that cannot be duplicated by trillion dollar software.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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      I mean, unskilled just means minimal extra training is needed, not that it’s not complicated. Actual non-complicated jobs were automated last century in the West.

  • thebudman420@lemmy.world
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    Computer can’t understand voices good enough so they think you say something different. For example standard voice to text has failed me for years. Voice control for years and years has still failed me. Using gps? fail every time because the computer or phone in this case thinks i say other words that sound nowhere the same. This is before and after AI. The biggest problem is voice recognition of words. Humans can separate sound and frequency better. Ear drums are better than microphones. Even in quite environments i have a voice that doesn’t get translated properly and fails more often than it doesn’t. So AI is going to glitch on a lot of voices too because the voice recognition part still works the same flawed way with flawed microphone technology.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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      18 hours ago

      Ear drums are better than microphones

      What do you mean about this part? A quality microphone is basically the same thing, although the impedance matching is achieved different ways.

      • thebudman420@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        At least i want to believe ear drums being flesh vibrate differently than non organic materials, cells squeeze and contract. The shape of the ear drum is different and the electric signal in the human body is different than electronic devices. It’s just a tiny tiny amount in a human. higher voltages like outside the body change and shape the sound a bit or cause distortions of certain wavelengths of the sound. Just my general idea. I had an ex girlfriend who had a wind up shortwave radio and if using it wound up instead of plugged in to AC or battery she could hold a signal on to a weak station. And no matter the power of the other stations there was less static and distortions on easy to get broadcast or hard to get broadcast. This was just a pocket radio. The flow of electricity is different between those method ac vs dc. Was the kind that winded down as you use it. Power is more stable during wind up or something. I could be a little bit wrong on the radio part because i would have to have my ex girlfriend show me again and no way am i going to go talk to her after over 15 years.

  • relativestranger@feddit.nl
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    2 days ago

    it’s not ‘ai’, it’s just a poorly trained voice recognition system that’s trying to decipher any random person’s voice. voice rec has a difficult-enough time when trained on a single person in a professional setting (lawyer, doctor, etc)–which is work we used to do here. it’s going to absolutely fail in a ‘drive thru’ environment.

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      it’s not ‘ai’, it’s just a poorly trained voice recognition system that’s trying to decipher any random person’s voice.

      I’m baffled that you can say “It’s not ‘AI,’ it’s a machine learning powered speech to text system” with a straight face.

      Even if we were to agree that ML-powered speech to text isn’t AI (and I don’t agree to that premise, for the record), there’s still the matter of processing the transcription to transform it into something that can be understood by the point of sale system - aka natural language processing. And while that NLP could be implemented without use of an LLM, given LLM’s current level of hype and the ease with which they can be shoved into any given product, I wouldn’t bet on Taco Bell execs approving such an approach, much less asking for it.

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      “It’s not AI, it’s just <multiple things that all fall under the category of Artificial Intelligence>”.

      AI is a huge field of computer science. It’s not the one tiny narrow definition of artificial general intelligence like HAL 9000 or Skynet or Detroit Become Human.

      • lemming741@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        It’s not AI unless it’s running on a cluster of H200s. Anything else is just sparkling text prediction.