Marc Lore, the serial entrepreneur behind Diapers.com and Jet.com, is pushing the boundaries of food service automation with his latest venture. His company Wonder has acquired and deployed an “infinite bowl” robotic system capable of producing up to 500 customized burrito bowls, salads, or poke bowls per hour—dwarfing the output of even the most efficient human worker, whom Lore estimates at around 30 to 45 bowls in the same timeframe.
This technology, originally developed by Sweetgreen and now rolling out in Wonder’s vertically integrated kitchens, spins bowls on a turntable as precise amounts of ingredients drop in according to online orders. The result, Lore boasts, is perfection with “no errors.”
Combined with Wonder’s ownership of multiple restaurant brands, GrubHub delivery, and plans for AI-generated concepts, it promises lower prices, extended hours, and service to smaller markets that traditional chains overlook.
Yet behind the impressive numbers lies a deeper question about the trajectory of work, community, and human dignity in an increasingly automated world. While efficiency gains are undeniable, the rapid displacement of entry-level kitchen jobs raises concerns about what kind of society we are building—one where machines handle the labor and humans become increasingly peripheral.
Lore’s vision extends far beyond burrito bowls. Wonder operates 26 brands under one roof, from premium steaks to ethnic fare, all funneled through centralized, automated facilities. Late-night operations require just three human staff members.
An “infinite sauce machine” and upcoming beverage system aim to compound these gains. Lore even envisions “Wonder Create,” where anyone can prompt an AI to launch a branded virtual restaurant for a modest monthly fee, leveraging the same robotic backbone.
Proponents celebrate this as innovation that reduces costs and expands access. Bowls under $10 and high-end steaks at reasonable prices sound appealing in an era of persistent inflation. Serving suburbs and smaller towns without the overhead of multiple brick-and-mortar locations could bring convenience to areas long ignored by big fast-casual players.
But this model also accelerates trends already reshaping the American workforce. Restaurant jobs have traditionally offered entry points for young workers, immigrants, and those building skills. When robots outperform humans by an order of magnitude, what becomes of those opportunities?
The promise of abundance through automation often overlooks the human need for purposeful work and the social fabric sustained by local businesses.
Chipotle and others have experimented with robotics for specific tasks like guacamole preparation, but they’ve approached full automation more cautiously, preserving some human element in assembly. Lore’s approach is bolder, betting that consumers prioritize speed, consistency, and price over the tactile experience of food prepared by fellow humans.
Critics might note that such systems excel at standardized digital orders but may struggle with the variability and creativity that define great food culture. More profoundly, they risk further eroding the relational aspects of dining and service that bind communities.
As Proverbs reminds us, “The hand of the diligent shall bear rule: but the slothful shall be under tribute.”
Automation rewards diligence in engineering and investment, yet societies must steward these tools wisely lest they create new forms of tribute—dependency on distant tech platforms while local human enterprise withers.
Wonder’s push toward an IPO signals confidence in this model scaling nationally. With Lore’s track record of billion-dollar exits, the technology may soon proliferate. The real test will be whether it delivers not just efficiency, but a net benefit to families, workers, and the common good.
In pursuing mastery over creation through invention, we must remember our calling to work as unto the Lord, valuing both innovation and the image-bearers who have long sustained essential trades.
The robotic bowl revolution is here. The question is whether we will shape it to honor human flourishing or allow it to diminish our shared humanity.
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