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 Sweetgreen, the popular salad restaurant chain is trying out automation for its customer experience. One of its locations in Naperville, Illinois is trying out a robot that would replace human salad-makers to help out with a significant portion of the work.The Wall Street Journal reported that the company is looking at options like having customers order from a tablet, which would then send the order to a robot to prepare the meal. The technology would include tubes that dispense ingredients according to the order.SEE MORE: This facility will be the first to mass produce human-like robotsThe company hopes that the idea would speed up delivery of food orders to customers stanley becher .Sweetgreen is using an adaptation of Spyce technology it acquired in 2021 to try to create a  frictionless experience,  Restaurant Business reported.A video from the company shows how the robotic technology moves bowls under various dispensing devices to stanley website   stanley thermos add ingredients to the bowl to construct salads on demand.Sweetgreen said the automated method is faster and has the ability to dispense more exact proportions for each layer of the salad.At the test location in Illinois, customers will be able to walk up to a  tasting counter  and try out the salads and give feedback. Jonathan Neman, who is the brand s CEO, said,  We believe that automation will enable us to elevate the quality and integrity of our food, while also providing a faster and more convenient experience. A report from Food Engineering found that au Drnm Pilot allegedly intoxicated, arrested after plane lands on Missouri interstate
 DENVER, Colo. 鈥?The pandemic gave us a whole new vocabulary: almost everyone is ready to Zoom, social distancing is welcome, and N95s are a popular accessory. But, theres an old concept thats gotten new life in the face of COVID-19. Telehealth will be here to stay,  said Dr. Patrick Ryan, an internal medicine physician at Denver Health in Colorado.Telehealth has been available for years, but it took a pandemic for doctors and patients alike to fully adopt this contactless connection. Before the pandemic started, we had not done any telehealth at all,  said Dr. Ryan.That changed within a matter of weeks for Dr. Ryan and his team at Denver Health. Theyve now had more than 200,000 appointments over the phone or on video chat since the pandemic started. Almost 40 percent of our patients through this pandemic were accessing our system through telehealth,   stanley thermos said Dr. Connie Price, the chief marketing officer for Denver Heal stanley cup th and an infectious disease specialist.Both Ryan and P stanley hrnek rice are working on building the telehealth program for their hospital.Once COVID-19 hit, they knew they had two big problems: keeping hospital beds open for COVID patients and making sure other patients could get care without coming into the office. Patients still have routine conditions such as diabetes hypertension, heart failure and those don t go away during a pandemic,  said Dr. Ryan.Those appointments were the first to go online: Dr. Ryan started calling and video chatting patients every day. Weve served