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Rodgera
13th January 2016, 09:51 AM
A friend was thinking about buying a new house in the country and
asked me to come out and look at it. We found the town, but we
couldn't locate the road. We drove over to city hall, where a
community get-together was going on, and asked around, but no one had
heard of the road. Even the policemen and fire personnel were stumped.

We went in to city hall and consulted a map, with no luck, until
finally one young man came to our aid. He pointed to the map, showing
us exactly how to get there. I thanked the young man and asked if he
was with the police or fire department.

"Neither," he replied. "I deliver pizzas."

rrich
15th January 2016, 03:37 PM
My son used to deliver pizzas. Once he was taking me home from dropping the car off for service. He took a very unusual turn and I asked why. He said that it avoided two traffic lights. I asked how he learned about the short cut. His answer was, "From my pizza delivering days."

Master Splinter
15th January 2016, 09:09 PM
The route planning software that the US delivery company UPS uses is designed to avoid making left turns at intersections; left turns in the US often mean waiting at traffic lights, and in 2011 the company says their route planning saved them an estimated 98 million minutes (6,800 years) of idling time.

joe greiner
16th January 2016, 07:41 PM
This applies almost anywhere.

To cross a busy thoroughfare in the adverse direction requires simultaneous gaps in both directions of oncoming traffic. Statistically unfavorable. The wise way to do it, is to turn in the favorable direction, then make a U-turn.

Cheers,
Joe

Optimark
18th January 2016, 09:33 AM
The route planning software that the US delivery company UPS uses is designed to avoid making left turns at intersections; left turns in the US often mean waiting at traffic lights, and in 2011 the company says their route planning saved them an estimated 98 million minutes (6,800 years) of idling time.

I do think there is a slight miscalculation somewhere. My pocket calculator suggests a year has 524,160 minutes on a very basic calculation of 52 straight weeks. Searching the web suggests that a year has 525,600 minutes in a year, not sure if that is an average that includes the variables, but reasonably close to my rough pocket calculator finger popping exercise.

98,000,000 minutes, using the 525,600 minutes a year figure, works out to 186.45 years, give or take. :C

Mick.

Christos
18th January 2016, 10:32 AM
.....

98,000,000 minutes, using the 525,600 minutes a year figure, works out to 186.45 years, give or take. :C

Mick.


Worst thing about this is that once you posted it I had to check. You are correct in saying that there are 525,600 minutes in a year.

60(minutes) X 24(hours) x 365(days) = 525,600 minutes.

My guess they missed something.

60(minutes) x 24(hours) = 1440 :B

98,000,000 / 1440 = 68055