And they didn’t charge you an extra fee either.
I often use my phone’s map just like I would a paper map. It just takes up less space.
This is why they would ask you for the nearest major intersection or cross street. This one weird trick.
Paper maps weren’t hard to use. Many people in large cities just had a detailed map books that gave you street level detail.
https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/1998-thomas-guide-map-los-angeles-3702771636
Also, the 30 minutes gimmick was shortlived in reality, and only for Dominoes. It relied heavily on a very small delivery range from each store.
Ended after too many delivery drivers got into accidents.
https://www.tastingtable.com/1949627/dominos-thirty-minute-delivery-explained/
Where I grew up, there was a delivery service where you got to order delivery from restaurants that didn’t offer it themselves. It was DoorDash, except instead of tech you had paper menus for restaurants and a number to call.
Felt pretty cool to get a full meal delivered!
I did this for a bit. I knew basically every street in half of a mid-size city, just like… in my head.
![wise men say, forgiveness is divine, but never party full price for late pizza] (https://i.pinimg.com/originals/70/0a/bb/700abb028b5efa915580499242936d64.jpg)
Big Hiro Protagonist enrgy
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