Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I've been there, and it's not fun. At all. I remember those days of scrounging for change and hoping to have enough to buy the few things we needed, and then the disappointment and embarrassment of having to take something out during checkout because we didn't have enough money. And our checking account was in the red. And no credit cards.The idea is to have the order delivered, not to pay with a ton of coins in line at the store. Don't laugh at poor people who have to dig through every pocket and then put stuff back anyway. Some of them have medical bills, student loans, etc. There but for the grace of God goes everybody, I guess...
Not everyone uses those services for instant gratification. Some people *need* this kind of help, and are lucky it exists now. People who are housebound or can't drive, among other things.Yet another solution in search of a problem in a very heavily instant gratification low-patience world.
READ ITS LABEL. On the product page for that item, at the store you're shopping for an Instacart order, like this for my favorite vegan cheese:I like the old fashioned method of seeing what i'm about to buy in person and not trusting that none of my food is tampered with in transit, or comes from some third-world country, or that my plant-based food isn't Soylent Green or something.
Are you serious, Nick?! How else do you think they're going to get groceries if they DON'T go to a brick and mortar building to buy them? I mean, really! Groceries aren't falling out of the sky...at least not the last time *I* checked.Instacart causes these people who still have to go to the store to pay three times for the same cart of groceries instead of all at once. It's similar to Redbox, it's an app but offers no streaming service. You still have to physically pick up a DVD at a brick and morter anyway so what's the point?
I also don't trust an image on a website over seeing the item physically.
I don't know if you're being intentionally obtuse or what, but you're definitely missing the point. So let's try this from a different angle!Moody, there are services like DoorDash and of course, Amazon, that do this amazing thing, they actually deliver the goods right to your door. I don't use or trust them, but they exist. Instacart still requires the drive, and it holds up the checkout line, so you get zero advantage.
Sears and Roebucks was the huge catalog we received when I was young. I don't recall my parents ever ordering anything but everyone in the fam got the chance to peruse and dream.