with supply and demand and all… IM DEMANDING CANNED BREAD!! where’s the supply 🥺?

It replaces workers with robots so it would probably save money too.

  • Brkdncr@lemmy.world
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    People in the US don’t respect others property. Look at any atm machine or vending machine. There’s no way these things wouldn’t be vandalized immediately.

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      This is the answer. Japan has a lot of respect for others (well, for other japanese at least), so these types of machines will last a lot longer; making the payoff more palatable.

      Place a vending machine outside in America, and it’ll be vandalized in a week max.

      Even in highly walkable cities, you don’t see vending machines. It has nothing to do with cars, it has to do with the culture of the US being one of disrespect most of the time.

      • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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        Vandalize? … the entire machine would be stolen. Either by thieves wanting to steal the merchandise or money or both. Or a bunch of teens that would tie a chain to it and drag it to the end of town for fun.

      • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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        Vending machines in the USA are common, but they are typically attached to an existing business. For instance, a Walmart or gas station will commonly host several machines in its entrance area.

    • GottaKnowYourCHKN@lemmy.world
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      Completely this. Americans don’t like letting other people have nice things. A vending machine would be vandalized, filled with glue as a TikTok prank, attempted to be stolen, and stop working within a few days.

      Americans don’t really give a shit about other people. We’re more individualistic. You got yours? Good. Fuck everyone else. If we have to have protests and fundraising efforts to TRY to convince people to help others – we got a long way to go.

      Japan is built on respect for your fellow man. You can leave your wallet out somewhere and someone would return it immediately.

    • OprahsedCreature@lemmy.ml
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      Respect for others property might follow respect for others but that’s not a popular concept in America

    • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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      When I visited california, there was a mall with multiple vending machines like the one in the OP for various foods and icecreams.

      • Stern@lemmy.world
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        Bet it was inside the mall, with a camera watching it. Japanese vending machines like the one mentioned can be just outside nbd.

        • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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          They were in the hallways, not out on the street. I didn’t look for any cameras, but there wasn’t any security nearby that would’ve seen anyone vandalize them. If there were cameras, I can’t imagine it mean much to people wearing a mask.

          I’m not saying vandalism isn’t more common in the US, I’m sure it is in compared to hyper-respectful Japan, but I don’t think it’s absolutely impossible to have these.

          • Confused_Emus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Growing up in the south eastern US vending machines were a common sight in a number of public spaces, and they were completely fine. No idea what third-world parts of the country the rest of these people grew up in.

  • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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    In the USA they lack the population density pressure to make it the most optimal solution of serving food, and the startup costs don’t justify changing from human labor to fully automated food sales. Also I bet the quality isn’t as good as you think it is from some preserved fried food wrapped in plastic.

    • Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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      Japan loves wrapping everything in plastic. They and the US were the only ones not to sign a promise reduce plastic usage. For all the appearances of Japan being eco conscious, they have this one big issue.

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    Too much reliance on cars for transportation and commerce built around that. Compared to Japan; we don’t have the opportunity for vending machines except when we are contained to a location without the ability to go to a store that isn’t that “far”. We have a larger scale of living; a half hour drive is normal to us, but a half hour drive for other countries is at the tipping point of finding a place to stay for the night and a vending machine selling a common foodstuff makes sense.

    If you were forced to walk everywhere and “corner stores” were infrequent, vending machines would be far more common and worthwhile for owners of those machines.

    • Drusas@fedia.io
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      I’m with you until the last paragraph. Corner stores are all over the place in Japan. It’s fantastic.

    • Skunk@jlai.lu
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      That is most likely the right answer.

      I’m in Switzerland and we have vending machines (not as cool as the Japanese ones tho) because we walk past them everyday.

      They are generally on the pavement near post offices, at train stations and other large public transportation places. For a time there was cigarettes vending machines near bars but I think those are now forbidden.

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        TBF I also felt Swiss people are much more trustworthy than most.

        I even remember having going out for dinner and the person behind the counter asking what we ordered; seems like a lot of restaurant ordering systems don’t keep track of orders because you can trust people being honest when they re-state their order at the counter.

        I’m from the Netherlands, also in a very walkable city (Utrecht), and students would vandalise vending machines if they existed!

        • Skunk@jlai.lu
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          Trust and respect are some of the core principles in Swiss education and society. There are those well known newspapers stands that always amaze tourists. They are not locked nor monitored but people still pay for the newspaper.

          For the restaurants it can be true but most places will know what you had only because the cash register system works like that (like they take the order on a phone that automatically sends everything to the kitchen and till). It’s mostly because all the systems available on the market works like that.

          But as everywhere, things are changing for the worse, there’s more and more violence, disrespect etc.

          Fun fact, I once had French friends visiting and they saw a field where you can take fruits yourself, weight them and pay the according price. No human supervision, no cameras. They were amazed and told me “In France we wouldn’t pay for the fruits, steal the money box AND the weighting machine”

  • lurch (he/him)@sh.itjust.works
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    Japan can have more vending machines, because their culture raises people in a way that they have less vandalism and the companies take more responsibility for problems with vending.

    • Something Burger 🍔@jlai.lu
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      I’m in France. There is a gas station near me with three vending machines : drinks, pizzas, and CBD.

      The pizza one is mostly fine. The grid protecting the screen was torn apart. Tbf it was annoying. The drinks one is damaged, and is now protected by a metal cage. The CBD machine is completely destroyed.

      All publicly available objects in France end up like this.

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      I thought you were going to say that their culture is more insular and less sociable, because that would be a better explanation than the popularity of vending machines.

  • 31337@sh.itjust.works
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    Factories I’ve worked at had vending machines filled with microwavable food (burritos, burgers, sandwiches, etc). All of it was pretty disgusting.

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      My experience here. Had one a place I worked which did breakfast foods (yogurt, breakfast sandwiches, breakfast burritos , etc) with a small microwave slot to heat up after it vended. Food was absolutely gross and it was always dicey if anything it vended was still in date. Only nice thing was the front was see through so you could check which items had visible mold and avoid those…

      Was cheaper than the cafe and had better hours (all of them) for my shift, but I don’t think the trade off of rolling the dice on food poisoning was worth it lol.

    • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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      Exactly.

      My thought when opening the post was basically, “Can you imagine the depths that American corporations would sink to in a market where they can totally conceal the flavor, size, quality, etc. of their products until after the sale, and not have anyone from the company present, making them totally immune to any negative feedback?”

      Presumably the companies behind these things in Japan are at least delivering a somewhat acceptable food item. I wouldn’t be surprised in any way to find an American version of this thing dispensing literal dead rats.

  • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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    Bro, do you even vend?

    Pizza vending machine in Seattle:

    Cupcake ATM in Beverly Hills (and 3 other cities I’ve been in including Orlando FL and Las Vegas):

    • TriflingToad@lemmy.worldOP
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      Oh that’s rad! Wonder if the amount of public areas in cities could relate to have more vending machines. The closest city to me doesn’t have a lot of public spaces.

      • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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        I would imagine the requirement would be high foot traffic. Food has an incredibly short shelf life compared to other vending machine contents. That pizza vending machine likely has to be serviced/refilled/cycled every 2 or 3 days. The cupcake ATM would be slightly longer. Most of the cupcake ATMs are attached to the cupcake bakeries, but allow customers to buy from the ATM outside of business hours or when the line of customer is really long inside.

        • False@lemmy.world
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          The pizza vending machine is in a hotel a block away from a larger physical location by for the same company. So similar arrangement. Probably easy for them to maintain

          • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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            Probably easy for them to maintain

            Agreed. I made the maintenance comment as to why pizza vending machines aren’t more widespread.

  • alienanimals@lemmy.world
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    Vending machines work better when there’s more foot traffic and more density.

    Vending machines with specialty goods (as pictured) need to be restocked every day and they require even more foot traffic. I think this is the biggest factor why OP’s vending machine is not viable in a lot of places in the US.

  • LemmyRefugee@lemmy.world
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    Somehow related. There is a Japanese anime where the protagonist is a human that reborns as a vending machine.

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    My boss once said that you can abuse human workers, you can underpay them, you can worsen their conditions (and if you do it slowly) they might not notice, or they going to work even harder to survive. Worst case scenario they quit, and you just find another one “new” and repeat the cycle.

    But you can’t underpay robots. You can’t abuse them. Why? Because they just break. You skip on maintenance, on working conditions, on anything around robots - and you are looking on fat sum of money that just going to get burnt on a new robot and its installation.

    So no, robots are not going to save money, especially in this scenario, because abuse would be massive.

      • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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        You do actually have to pay them more than minimum wage, if you think about it.

        Minimum wage in many countries is so low it’s not enough to sustain a human. You can’t do it to a robot, since it will just not do its job, no matter how many regulators you capture or how many middle management manipulations you pull. You have to pay a living wage to a robot.

        This is why “people are still cheaper than robots”. What happens if there’s a 20% wave of inflation? With workers, it’s “we don’t give out 20% pay raises, grow up”, with robots, it’s “here is your power bill, it’s 30% higher to cover for any further fluctuations in inflation, pay it or shut your factory down”.

        Robots need breaks too, if they are not regularly maintained they will start to make mistakes, costly mistakes, and they might break, and when one breaks, you don’t just recruit one more wage slave from the fucked up job market, you shell out a lot of money for a new robot.

        • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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          There may be cases where the price of labor is lower than the price of a specific machine, but the Industrial Revolution was built on replacing labor with capital.

          It isn’t evenly spread out, but it is something increasingly happening to more and more jobs.

      • Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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        The problem is minimum wage is the break even equivalent of like 2-10k human hours without even factoring in expensive maintenance costs.

        • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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          A return on investment of 0.5 to 2.5 years is pretty good for companies. You also have to factor the costs of maintaining a space for a human equivalent. Paying a wage doesn’t cover all labor costs.

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        You have to pay them minimum wage, It’s just called “monthly maintenance expenses” and it’s quite a bit more than minimum pay for humans

        • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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          and it’s quite a bit more than minimum pay for humans

          Is it? I can buy a vending machine for less than $8000. Converting that cost to minimum wage, that is ~28 full time weeks worth of labor to act as a mechanism to sell items. There are probably a lot of times when the cost in capital is less than the cost in labor.

  • orcrist@lemm.ee
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    Japan has a lot of drink vending machines, but relatively few food or candy vending machines. This is actually an area where the United States performs strongly. That being said, Japan has a real number of strange vending machines.

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    cuz nobody likes eating out of plastic containers in the United States. these vending machines are full of extremely processed garbage taste like shit and produces a shitload of plastic garbage, waste garbage crap. I like Japan.

  • Cringedrif@lemmy.world
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    I just saw a book vending machine in an elementary school this weekend…I thought that was kind of cool.