Amazon’s delivery backlash and 800 robots descend on St. Louis

May 6, 2016  |  Kat Hungerford

Regional Roundup

In this week’s roundup of watercooler talk from the region’s startup hubs, we have the dish on Amazon’s digital divide backpedaling, St. Louis’ international robotics competition and Denver’s vibrant city culture. Check out more in this series here.a

ChicagoInno: Amid controversy, Amazon is finally bringing same-day delivery to the South Side

And the backpedaling continues. Amid much backlash, Amazon finally greenlit its one-day delivery service to the predominantly black neighborhoods the company initially left off its delivery map.

The e-commerce giant previously said it had forgone delivery to black neighborhoods in Chicago, New York and Boston due to a combination of distance from distribution centers and density of its Prime members.

The “you-know-what” really hit the fan when Bloomberg pointed out discrepancies in Amazon’s story. Chicago’s 85-percent-white Oak Lawn bureau is located further away from Amazon’s distribution center than the mostly-black South Side. Boston’s Roxbury is completely surrounded by neighborhoods that get the service. And in New York, Amazon will deliver to the more cut-off-but-affluent Staten Island while pretending the Bronx is invisible.

While Amazon doesn’t base its decisions on demographics, not taking them into consideration at all is what’s led to this little thing called the digital divide, which increasingly affects some of the nation’s poorest — and primarily black — communities.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch: Robotics booms in St. Louis as thousands of students gather to ‘compete with their minds’

St. Louis recently played host mom to 29,000 students and their 800 robots.

No, it wasn’t an attempt to get Skynet online sooner than expected. Students competing in the international “For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology” (FIRST) Championship have descended on the city annually for the past six years.

FIRST invites K-12 students to build robots from a provided parts kit, which must then solve assigned problems or complete specific tasks. Competitors tussle it out by age group at regional and state levels to reach the final showdown in St. Louis.

The championship seeks to instill in kids a passion for STEM that will eventually lead to college majors and jobs in the field. And it’s working, according to the article.

As Kansas City labors over its own tech workforce and STEM curriculum issues, it might be worth a try to see if the answer lies outside the classroom.

Virgin: Is Colorado home to the world’s healthiest entrepreneurs?

Cities all want a piece of that sweet, sweet entrepreneurial pie. And some cities have been better at stealing pieces than others. We’re looking at you, Denver.

The startup crowd flocking to Denver says the city has a different ace in the hole: quality of life.

For example, when the city first began actively trying to attract the millennial startup crowd, it put in more bike lanes. Not financial incentives, not tax breaks. Bike lanes.

Denver’s startup lifestyle features meetings that take place not in conference rooms, but on hiking trails, which people get to by — you guessed it — biking. An entrepreneur’s mentors are as likely to complete Ironman competitions as lead boardrooms. Lunch meetups happen over health food.

Using Denver as an example, it seems that vibrant and well-publicised city culture — whatever that may be — is just as important as other more practical factors.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2016 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        KC wants to be the nation’s most equitable hub for biologics; prestigious MIT pick could help

        By Tommy Felts | July 22, 2022

        Biologics is the entryway to personalized medicine, said Sonia Hall, and Kansas City is aiming to create the most inclusive hub for the development, production and distribution of biologics as part of its acceptance to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Regional Entrepreneurship Acceleration Program.  “When you talk about personalized medicine, you’re talking about greater equity…

        PropTechHD looks beyond the façade of drone use to see sky-high potential for capturing high-quality data

        By Tommy Felts | July 22, 2022

        A lot can go wrong when flying a drone around a high-rise building, acknowledged Andrew Patch. Think restricted airspace, pigeons, hawks, turbulence, swirling winds, pressure changes, trees, powerlines, and other unexpected obstacles. But behind the sticks of a controller, Patch steers into the challenge. In February 2017, he founded Heartland Drone Company, an Federal Aviation…

        Hack Midwest is back with $20K in prizes, space for tech talent to flex app-building muscles

        By Tommy Felts | July 21, 2022

        More than prize money is on the line when Hack Midwest returns this weekend to Kansas City, Michael Gelphman said, detailing how the contest could ignite progress in the local tech ecosystem.  “We can get people to think entrepreneurially and create new ideas,” said Gelphman, the competition’s founder, noting the power and potential of the…

        Betty Rae's Ice Cream, River Market, May 2019

        GiftAMeal posts food selfie milestone: 1 million meals donated through Missouri-made app

        By Tommy Felts | July 21, 2022

        Foodie photos shared to social media through a Missouri tech startup’s app have provided more than 1 million meals — representing more than 1.2 million pounds of healthy groceries for families in need — thanks to GiftAMeal’s network of restaurant and food bank partnerships, the company said. St. Louis-based GiftAMeal this week announced the milestone donation…