Naked Science Forum

Non Life Sciences => Technology => Topic started by: alancalverd on 12/05/2017 21:55:15

Title: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: alancalverd on 12/05/2017 21:55:15

Cool, please email me a sandwich.

Happy to help. Since I gave up pointless commuting and started working from home, I've occasionally ordered lunch by email from a local sandwich van, pizza shop or curry kitchen. Vastly more efficient for all concerned (especially if I'm holding a 3-way Skype conference with a manufacturer in Germany and a technician in Scotland) and far less polluting.   
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: Bored chemist on 13/05/2017 11:57:56

Cool, please email me a sandwich.

Happy to help. Since I gave up pointless commuting and started working from home, I've occasionally ordered lunch by email from a local sandwich van, pizza shop or curry kitchen. Vastly more efficient for all concerned (especially if I'm holding a 3-way Skype conference with a manufacturer in Germany and a technician in Scotland) and far less polluting.   
That's very nice.
I didn't ask you to email the order for a sandwich, I asked you to email a sandwich.
So you haven't addressed the real issue, have you?
You can't do all commerce on line because you can't deliver real-world products on line.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: alancalverd on 13/05/2017 13:49:31
So all those "office" workers in London are actually employed planting trees, carrying sacks of coal, rice, or whatever, or building houses and cars. No wonder the place is hot and smelly. 
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: Bored chemist on 13/05/2017 17:28:53
So all those "office" workers in London are actually employed planting trees, carrying sacks of coal, rice, or whatever, or building houses and cars. No wonder the place is hot and smelly. 
No
Nobody said they were- so that's a straw-man isn't it?

I see you don't think that what you said is important; it can't be, or you would remember, or at least read, it.
What you said was "any other commercial activity can be better done on line."
And providing sandwiches is part of commerce.
So, according to you  it can be done on line.

However, in the real world, you are wrong, and it can't.

Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: alancalverd on 14/05/2017 23:02:51
So Amazon, Just Eat, and every airline, are not in the real world.

Mustabin sumptin I smoked, man.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: jeffreyH on 16/05/2017 17:46:09
Transaction and delivery are separate entities. After you've written your 100th ecommerce website this becomes very apparent.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: Bored chemist on 16/05/2017 19:30:47
So Amazon, Just Eat, and every airline, are not in the real world.

Mustabin sumptin I smoked, man.
You just made my point for me.
They are in the real world- not the virtual one.
Their commerce isn't just on line, is it?
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: Bored chemist on 16/05/2017 19:32:34
Transaction and delivery are separate entities. .
Indeed, and they both form part of commerce.
The transaction can often be done on line. That's simply not the case with delivery.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: jeffreyH on 16/05/2017 20:11:11
Transaction and delivery are separate entities. .
Indeed, and they both form part of commerce.
The transaction can often be done on line. That's simply not the case with delivery.

What if you had edible paper and ink in a special fax machine and I sent an image of a burger. The ink could be flavoured appropriately. Wouldn't that be cool? Or a 3d printer using cooking ingredients.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: alancalverd on 16/05/2017 20:23:01
Britain's only remaining industry is, apparently, banking. I haven't seen many people heaving sacks of notes and gold around the City of London, and international banking has come a long way since galleons moved doubloons arond the Spanish Empire to pay the Conquistadores' wages.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: chiralSPO on 16/05/2017 20:37:59
This discussion has gotten somewhat off-track, and I will probably come back and split it when I have the time. But I will point out that with 3-D printing, items can now be generated at one place, using information from another. This may at some point be used commercially to "transmit" produced goods.

Of course, the raw material for producing said goods still has to be moved around the old fashioned way (until some time in the 23rd century, if star trek can be trusted)
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: Bored chemist on 16/05/2017 21:28:52
Britain's only remaining industry is, apparently, banking. I haven't seen many people heaving sacks of notes and gold around the City of London, and international banking has come a long way since galleons moved doubloons arond the Spanish Empire to pay the Conquistadores' wages.
You already tried that straw-man.
It already failed.

You stated a bizarre absolute
What you said was "any other commercial activity can be better done on line."
Proving that some activity is done on line is not the same as showing that any activity can be done on line.



Incidentally, it's not true that "Britain's only remaining industry is, apparently, banking."
That's just Right wing propaganda.
The figures are here
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_the_United_Kingdom#Manufacturing
"In 2011 the UK manufacturing sector generated approximately £140,539 million in gross value added "
"The UK financial services industry added gross value of £116,363 million to the UK economy in 2011."

(OK the figures are a bit out of date but the point stands; manufacturing is bigger than finance.)
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: jeffreyH on 16/05/2017 21:54:31
This discussion has gotten somewhat off-track, and I will probably come back and split it when I have the time. But I will point out that with 3-D printing, items can now be generated at one place, using information from another. This may at some point be used commercially to "transmit" produced goods.

Of course, the raw material for producing said goods still has to be moved around the old fashioned way (until some time in the 23rd century, if star trek can be trusted)

Food, climate. Climate, food. What's the difference?
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: chiralSPO on 16/05/2017 22:08:45
Food, climate. Climate, food. What's the difference?

While I will grant that food and climate are quite closely linked, the question of whether a sandwich can be emailed has essentially no bearing on the question of how harmful global warming might be. Since there appeared to be interest in this line of discussion, I took the liberty of splitting it off.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: evan_au on 16/05/2017 23:11:41
Technology is advancing rapidly:
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: RD on 17/05/2017 01:26:37
  • I am not aware of any researchers who claim to be able to email you the smell of a sandwich.

Virtual Reality olfaction  is here ...
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: evan_au on 17/05/2017 11:20:58
Quote
Virtual Reality olfaction  is here ...
I wonder if they have a sandwich cartridge?

In reality, we have hundreds of smell receptors in our noses (and not always the same set for everyone). So I expect a 7-channel smell generator would give fairly low resolution.

But looking at another sense, we have been able to conveniently email the sound of someone making (or eating) a sandwich for at least 10 years.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: Bored chemist on 17/05/2017 20:57:55
Well, there's this
https://www.theverge.com/2014/1/24/5342180/watch-this-3d-printer-make-pizza-fit-for-astronauts
but the point remains- you can't email new cartridges to it.

So the original claim that Alan made
" any other commercial activity can be better done on line."
is still daft.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: chris on 17/05/2017 21:08:27
This discussion has gotten somewhat off-track, and I will probably come back and split it when I have the time. But I will point out that with 3-D printing, items can now be generated at one place, using information from another. This may at some point be used commercially to "transmit" produced goods.

3d printed fruit, anyone? (https://www.thenakedscientists.com/articles/interviews/3d-printed-fruit-factory)

I see the day coming when every household will have a 3d printer-type thing and we will buy "recipes" that enable us to produce whatever it is we want using our home "replicator". Even medicines could be made this way. There will, naturally, be some things that require more specialist reagents, but these could be sent in advance of the synthesis, when needed.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: jeffreyH on 18/05/2017 12:27:46
Could a 3d printer print another 3d printer?
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: Bored chemist on 18/05/2017 20:45:04
Could a 3d printer print another 3d printer?
More or less
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RepRap_project
but, in spite of Alan's weird belief, it would need to be supplied with material in the real (rather than virtual) world.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: jeffreyH on 18/05/2017 21:41:59
We are verging on Skynet territory. Don't show it a photo of Arnie.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: meghayadav045 on 09/08/2017 08:35:44
For now It si not possible
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: alancalverd on 10/08/2017 11:08:58
Electronic commerce assumes equivalent competence and intention to collaborate, just like barter and cash transactions.

Of course you can't email a sandwich - due to packet data transmission it would be minced into inedible fragments. You need analog fax.

Unfortunately, BC's fax machine returns <<out of paper>> every time I try. Which tells me (a) BC is too mean to keep his fax loaded and (b) he is too dumb to realise it needs bread, not paper.  I despair.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: jeffreyH on 10/08/2017 20:04:57

Electronic commerce assumes equivalent competence and intention to collaborate, just like barter and cash transactions.

Of course you can't email a sandwich - due to packet data transmission it would be minced into inedible fragments. You need analog fax.

Unfortunately, BC's fax machine returns <<out of paper>> every time I try. Which tells me (a) BC is too mean to keep his fax loaded and (b) he is too dumb to realise it needs bread, not paper.  I despair.
Electronic commerce assumes equivalent competence and intention to collaborate, just like barter and cash transactions.

Of course you can't email a sandwich - due to packet data transmission it would be minced into inedible fragments. You need analog fax.

Unfortunately, BC's fax machine returns <<out of paper>> every time I try. Which tells me (a) BC is too mean to keep his fax loaded and (b) he is too dumb to realise it needs bread, not paper.  I despair.
Electronic commerce assumes equivalent competence and intention to collaborate, just like barter and cash transactions.

Of course you can't email a sandwich - due to packet data transmission it would be minced into inedible fragments. You need analog fax.

Unfortunately, BC's fax machine returns <<out of paper>> every time I try. Which tells me (a) BC is too mean to keep his fax loaded and (b) he is too dumb to realise it needs bread, not paper.  I despair.

You know what's wrong don't you? You are trying to fax a popup toaster.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: jeffreyH on 10/08/2017 20:16:02
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: syhprum on 29/09/2017 21:07:25
 "Britain's only remaining industry is, apparently, banking."
I think apart from banking I think the UK is quite big on making killing machines, as long as wars continue we will prosper.
Title: Re: Can you email me a sandwich?
Post by: thethinkerr on 24/04/2019 09:38:29
Nowadays we can email everything, using 3D printing or virtual/augmented reality technology :) And actually to create AR/VR is not really hart for today, and this technology is widely used in food and beverage industry.