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View Full Version : KFC's New Meal Box Can Charge Your Smartphone



Teh One Who Knocks
06-23-2016, 11:13 AM
by Virginia Chamlee - Eater


http://i.imgur.com/qfiZWVO.jpg

Good news for anyone who has ever needed to charge their phone, but found themselves neck-high in fried chicken and unable to walk to the nearest outlet. KFC's new meal box includes a USB port, so diners can simultaneously eat fried chicken, charge their phone, and try not to get chicken grease all over said phone.

Deccan Chronicle reports the the 5-in-1 mealbox, dubbed "Watt a Box," comes complete with an "integrated powerbank, allowing customers to charge their phones while eating."

According to a trial by BGR, however, the powerbank doesn't even come close to fully charging a phone. Testers who charged an iPhone with the box said it only gained 17 percent battery after charging for half-an-hour, during which time the powerbank became completely drained. After recharging the power bank itself, testers tried charging the phone again, "but the power bank ran out of juice again with the phone gaining just seven percent of charge."

Unfortunately for those in the U.S. looking for a really fattening meal that doubles as a really terrible phone charger, the Watt a Box is only available in select stores in Delhi and Mumbai.

KFC has unveiled similar tech-meets-fast-food products in other markets, though. Last year in Canada, the chicken chain released a photo printer that was built inside its signature bucket of grease-stained fried chicken.

redred
06-23-2016, 11:29 AM
:lol:this has to be BS

DemonGeminiX
06-23-2016, 12:42 PM
Power banks can be relatively expensive. You can't make a useful one at "fast food" low cost. It doesn't make financial sense to attempt this.

redred
06-23-2016, 12:43 PM
I got a free one the other month from a hardware store we have in this country

DemonGeminiX
06-23-2016, 12:51 PM
I'm not saying they're ridiculously expensive for a person to obtain, I'm saying they're relatively expensive for a fast food joint to implement in a box and actually be useful... in other words, have it be able to charge a phone completely from say 10% of phone battery life remaining. Most power banks that can do that cost more than $10. Now you have throw away food boxes that are costing your company greater than $10 to produce? That is, assuming you want a useful power bank. Now think about how many people eat at KFC on a daily basis. You're going to implement this on a large scale? And you want prices to be low for customers? What kind of financial sense does that make? You'll just be burning through revenue.

redred
06-23-2016, 12:52 PM
I agree