• electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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    41 minutes ago

    Like others have said, we had a big map. One thing I remembered though is how fucking often I would forget somebody’s 2-liter of Pepsi or whatever. I would just stop and buy one on the way, and then later grab one from work and take it home.

  • NABDad@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    I worked in the kitchen and did deliveries the summer after I graduated high school.

    We had a map under a piece of plexiglass on the counter. You’d have to look at it and memorize where you were going before you left.

    We didn’t have a 30 minute or it’s free deal, but there was still pressure to deliver fast. Driving their car too fast, I hit the hump in the middle of an intersection and became briefly airborne. All four tires left the street.

  • ratjefe@lemmy.today
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    8 hours ago

    ex land pirate here … we’d keep a map of the city on the wall for reference but it seemed like most of the drivers just remembered where places were if they’d been working there for any amount of time … I answered phones and made the pizzas when it was still ok to throw the dough up in the air, etc. fun job

  • Surp@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Used to do it myself. The pizza place I worked for gave me a map of the town and said cya. Once went to the wrong street on literally the other side of town because close to same name streets but one was “drive” and the other was “ave” and I was tired.

  • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    and the reason they stopped delivering within 30 minutes was cause it led to reckless driving and many, many, many traffic accidents and losses of life.

      • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        Yep. There were many wrongful death lawsuits as well, i think which resulted in millions of dollars of payouts to families, and all the coverage really hit domino’s reputation to the point they finally dropped the half hour guarantee in the mid 90s because of the financial blows from reputation loss and settlements.

        Though I wouldnt be surprised if they try to bring it back via drone deliveries.

  • Skanky@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    As one of those Gen-X land pirates, I really wonder what would happen if GPS suddenly disappeared? Like, when is the last time anyone has seen or used a paper map?

    I also delivered pizza back in the days, and yeah - the big paper map was a thing, but after awhile, didn’t even need that

    • __hetz@sh.itjust.works
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      8 hours ago

      I still grab the latest highway maps from rest stops. What I haven’t seen, that used to be in almost every gas station and convenience store, were the multi-page county atlases. Damn things would set you back $15-20 a pop but you’d look up a street name, get the page and grid location, then work backward to whatever highway you were taking. We had a stack of them in my buddy’s work van and used them to get to everywhere. Navigating DC by paper map was an experience.

      “ADC the Map People” made the ones for the DC/Maryland/Virginia area but stopped in 2010. It looks like they probably also made those massive wall maps used by the local pizza joints too. Doesn’t seem like anyone makes anything similar to them now. Makes me wonder what LEO/Fire/EMS does now; they used to all carry atlases for their service area - even just as a fallback after GPS became widely available.

    • DataCrime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      12 hours ago

      Oh man… I’m dyslexic so basically without GPS I’m constantly confused.

      I worked for a weird IT company called AllSafe J/K AllCovered™ that really leaned into their homegrown dispatch software. And it was pretty impressive… but it relied on the GPS in our Dell laptops, which was not so hot inside a Ferriday cage, or frankly even sitting on top of a car, so I remember having a Thomas Guide, and several other paper maps that I would try desperately to use to find the next client location.

      It was almost never the same client twice so learning a route was basically impossible. I got shitcanned for bitching out my supervisor, who didn’t know he was my supervisor, because none of us knew who each other were. Good-fuck, social engineering would have been a piece of cake back then.

    • JensSpahnpasta@feddit.org
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      12 hours ago

      You can look into places where GPS is heavily jammed like Ukraine, Russia or the baltics. It’s not great, but people will adapt.

  • Leviathan@fedinsfw.app
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    16 hours ago

    I have three local places that still deliver using their own guy and I order exclusively from them. It limits my options, but fuck the delivery apps. Anywhere else, I either dine in or pick it up myself.

  • prettybunnys@piefed.social
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    14 hours ago

    After the internet too.

    I delivered pizzas for quite some time and we had a map on the wall laid out like a road map with grids.

    Order came in, address matched to grid, find the address and go.

    Our slower drivers would use gps or maps. The good ones just knew the area.

  • jaaake@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    I love the association that younger generations have with paper maps is pirates. Literally everyone used maps, they had racks of them at gas stations. And yet, now they’re legendary items that only exist with Xs that mark the location of treasure.

    Also, I cannot explain my excitement the first time I cut a human out of the pizza ordering pipeline. With zero regard for the employment impact, all I could think about was never getting the wrong kind of pizza (or it it going to the wrong house and never showing up) again. No longer was there a risk of being misheard or someone else making a mistake entering the order info for your address or a half sausage and onion, half pepperoni jalapeño pizza. Everyone around me thought ordering your pizza through an internet website was the nerdiest thing. Most of them didn’t know it was an option and even after my explanation, they preferred to call, wait your turn on hold, repeat your house number, spell out your street name, give a cross street and explain which half of the pizza was your parents toppings and which half was the kids. People just couldn’t believe that you could type something into a computer at your house and then a pizza would show up, without the assurance of a person’s voice confirming they’d received your order and that they will cook exactly what you requested and bring it to you. Of course there was no feedback in those days. You didn’t get an ETA for when it would arrive, an update when your pizza was being cooked, or when the driver left the shop, let alone a GPS tracked map of the drivers location. Once you selected whether you were paying in cash (like a normal person) or paid in advance with a credit card (like some kind of fancy business person), you just waited. If your order didn’t show up after 45 mins, you pick up the house phone, find a coupon you saved with the pizza shop number, and manually press physical plastic buttons that moved and beeped, which was the style at the time.

  • Pavidus@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Something that seems immediately apparent to me is that these folks are not fresh high school students. Adults used to work these jobs.

    • Fmstrat@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Sort of. I did this at 16-18.

      Also, one person didn’t do all that, still doesn’t. Phones, oven, and delivery are all separate jobs, with phones and oven overlapping during slow shifts.

    • SGforce@lemmy.ca
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      23 hours ago

      I can’t even remember what jobs teenagers were supposed to have. Newspaper delivery? Ice cream bike guy? That’s all I got.

      • lime!@feddit.nu
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        23 hours ago

        teenagers as a group designation used to not be a thing. you were a child until you could do adult jobs and then you were an adult.

        children would have menial jobs like coal miner, day labourer, the guy who sticks their hand into the mechanical loom when it gets stuck…

          • lime!@feddit.nu
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            6 hours ago

            we didn’t have delivery where i lived at that point, only take-away. quirks of living in a place with less than 10 people per km2 on average.

        • dingus@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          It still does in my area. Not every grocery store, but the big grocery chain around here definitely does. Sometimes they even offer to take my groceries to the car for me which has surprised me.

          • Broadfern@lemmy.world
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            15 hours ago

            Hello New Englander.

            Yeah even having moved from there to the US South most grocery stores still have traditional checkout lanes/humans bagging your items if you so choose.

        • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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          22 hours ago

          Work that grocers have passed onto their customers that they used to do themselves:

          • Gathering the groceries from the shelves.
          • Bagging the groceries.
          • Checking out the groceries.
          • godsammitdam@lemmy.zip
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            22 hours ago

            Good ol shadow work.

            Ikea is the greatest.

            • You look up the items in inventory and find their warehouse locations
            • You traverse the warehouse, locate the items, and load them on your dolly
            • You take them to the front and self checkout
            • You load them in your delivery vehicle and complete last mile delivery
            • You unbox and assemble the item with minimal instruction and provide your own tools

            All of those used to be paid work, some even being part of the “white glove” service. Instead, we pay with our time, a finite resource.

              • godsammitdam@lemmy.zip
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                20 hours ago

                In theory, yes, I agree. But make sure you properly value yourself! You only have so much time to give.

                Though, that was also said about digital games instead of physical ones, that the savings get passed onto the consumer. Not a 1:1 but that one is going swimmingly right now 😅

      • xav@programming.dev
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        21 hours ago

        How about none ? You’re a teen, you just need to learn, socialize and have fun. Don’t work before your an adult.

        • somethingsnappy@lemmy.world
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          20 hours ago

          Ah, privilege. Parents had ok jobs. As soon as I needed sports equipment or wanted to go out to eat/pay for friends etc etc it was lawn mowing, paper route, construction from 6th grade.

          • Dozzi92@lemmy.world
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            16 hours ago

            Yeah, I dunno, I wanted to work, because I know it would give me money to go do things I wanted to do. Got my first job at 15, which was the youngest you could work in NJ, and have had consistent employment ever since. Money is, unfortunately, important.

        • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          17 hours ago

          If it’s possible to earn something voluntarily is great.
          Tyvm.

          I delivered advertisement for a marketing agency of various local businesses.
          Was the pay shit? Yes
          Did I make enough money to not be a bum and make my mother pay for a gaming pc? Yes.

    • bountygiver [any]@lemmy.ml
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      22 hours ago

      And they were a proper fleet who has delivered in the same areas for years, making them extremely experienced in navigating those streets.

        • other_cat@piefed.zip
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          1 hour ago

          There’s a local restaurant that still does their own delivery, and we order lunch from them each week on the same day pretty regularly. We recently moved (still in area) and he was like “Hey wait you moved!” and we had a nice lil convo, it was pleasant. I miss that.