LockPickingLawyer Assesses the BoxLock...

F

Fred Bloggs

Guest
BoxLock is a good idea but they\'re barely staying afloat. If you go to their website you\'ll see why. It\'s written for logistics geeks. The general public isn\'t going to buy that overcomplicated headache.

The LockPickingLawyer shows how easy it is to open. The quick grab and run types won\'t take the time to open it this way, but somebody else with inside knowledge of the value of the delivery just might.

To be fair, the LockPickingLawyer should say he can and does open everything, even the best locks from manufacturers who know how to make secure locks.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qTY3ePV4RY4
 
On 10/30/2022 6:22 PM, Fred Bloggs wrote:
BoxLock is a good idea but they\'re barely staying afloat. If you go to their
website you\'ll see why. It\'s written for logistics geeks. The general public
isn\'t going to buy that overcomplicated headache.

Don\'t these people have neighbors? I routinely get asked by neighbors to
accept a package that they are expecting; especially nowadays when they
get an *alert* indicating when it will be delivered or when it was *just*
delivered.

I guess if you don\'t invest in your neighbors, you invest in technology?
Personally, I find neighbors considerably more reliable!

The LockPickingLawyer shows how easy it is to open. The quick grab and run
types won\'t take the time to open it this way, but somebody else with inside
knowledge of the value of the delivery just might.

To be fair, the LockPickingLawyer should say he can and does open
everything, even the best locks from manufacturers who know how to make
secure locks.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qTY3ePV4RY4
 
On Monday, October 31, 2022 at 1:01:10 AM UTC-4, Don Y wrote:
On 10/30/2022 6:22 PM, Fred Bloggs wrote:
BoxLock is a good idea but they\'re barely staying afloat. If you go to their
website you\'ll see why. It\'s written for logistics geeks. The general public
isn\'t going to buy that overcomplicated headache.
Don\'t these people have neighbors? I routinely get asked by neighbors to
accept a package that they are expecting; especially nowadays when they
get an *alert* indicating when it will be delivered or when it was *just*
delivered.

I guess if you don\'t invest in your neighbors, you invest in technology?
Personally, I find neighbors considerably more reliable!
The LockPickingLawyer shows how easy it is to open. The quick grab and run
types won\'t take the time to open it this way, but somebody else with inside
knowledge of the value of the delivery just might.

To be fair, the LockPickingLawyer should say he can and does open
everything, even the best locks from manufacturers who know how to make
secure locks.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qTY3ePV4RY4

There could be other reasons for using this. If you have a driveway that\'s a few hundred feet long and you want to spare the delivery driver the headache of driving up to the house and turning around, a secure container by the driveway entrance is what you need. Range is probably an issue with wifi too.
 
On 10/31/2022 5:50 AM, Fred Bloggs wrote:
There could be other reasons for using this. If you have a driveway that\'s a
few hundred feet long and you want to spare the delivery driver the headache
of driving up to the house and turning around, a secure container by the
driveway entrance is what you need. Range is probably an issue with wifi
too.

Dunno. We\'re at the edge of town. Houses farther out have
those insanely long driveways -- you can\'t even see the house from
the street; the only clues to their presence are the driveways
(often not paved due to the cost for that length) and the mailbox
(letter carriers use trucks, here, so mail is delivered to the end of
your driveway, not your house).

USPS will only put packages that fit in your mailbox INTO the mailbox;
others are left at the door.

Hard to imagine FedEx or UPS leaving a package at the roadside;
they bring *my* packages right to my front door so I would assume
they would do similarly for folks with long driveways.

The gated communities likely leave packages at the \"gate house\".
 

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