Pizza hut delivery software
No problem, I filled out my name then it tells me to fill out the credit card number. The number was already filled out. I checked it against my credit card and ended up just refilling the same number again and it worked. The developer, Pizza Hut, Inc. The following data may be used to track you across apps and websites owned by other companies:.
The following data may be collected and linked to your identity:. Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More. With Family Sharing set up, up to six family members can use this app. App Store Preview. Screenshots iPad iPhone. Description Download the official Pizza Hut app for the easiest way to order your favorite pizza, wings, desserts and more! Dec 13, Version 5. Ratings and Reviews.
App Privacy. Information Seller Pizza Hut, Inc. Size Compatibility iPhone Requires iOS Mac Requires macOS Languages English. Price Free. The server then sends the order to the participating Domino's store that serves the customer's address. An e-mail confirmation with estimated delivery time is sent to the customer to inform them that the Domino's store has received their order.
As noted in the comment below, a long wait is not necessarily the fault of slow servers or faulty software. Typically, pizza delivery places are staffed with 1 - 3 telephone personnel, a manager and 3 - 5 delivery drivers. There are periods throughout the day "rush" during which such staffing is insufficient to carry out an order from start to finish in under an hour, even if drivers are carefully routed to enable them to deliver multiple orders.
From experience in the pizza delivery trade in college with Domino's! If it takes a full ten minutes for your order to reach the store and there are 6 orders ahead of yours, it will be a bare minimum of 16 minutes from the time you place your order until your pizza ever sees the oven, 28 minutes if each of the pies is a large, loaded.
And if there are more than six orders ahead of yours? It further bogs down at the end of the bake time - if a driver headed to your area isn't right there, your pizza will sit under the heat lamps until someone comes back in, sometimes as long at 15 minutes! If you're ordering during peak hours, you may well fall victim to the wait that ordering during the rush imposes, no matter how close to your outlet you live.
It's remarkably frustrating that technology still hasn't helped us figure out a way to get our pizzas a little faster, isn't it? Thanks for your inquiry! Best regards, missy-ga. Request for Answer Clarification by hagen-ga on 29 Apr PDT One last bit: Once a pack of pizzas is ready to go, how is the path determined the driver has to take in order to deliver the pizzas the fastest way?
Procedures for determining the path of the delivery vary from shop to shop, but typically work like this: Your shop's delivery area is shown on a large wall map. Each street is labelled on this map, and sometimes color coded. The map is divided into sections and numbered, and each driver is assigned one or two sections that he is responsible for.
If it is peak rush time, drivers passing through one section to get to another may be asked to drop a pie on the way, to help keep delivery times down. When an order is up, one of the phone people or the manager if he's not on the make line or pulling pizzas from the oven will act as a router, looking at destinations for other pies to determine if any can be grouped together and sent with the same driver.
For instance, if the pie out in sector 3 was called in 22 minutes ago, but the pie going to sector 1, where your shop is located is only 16 minutes old, the driver will be instructed to deliver the pie in sector 3 first, even though sector 1 is closer.
I'm sure this sounds ridiculously complicated, but it actually makes sense when you're doing it! Sometimes, a pie will come up for a driver who is currently out on a run, and no one is passing through his sector to make the delivery. Under the lamps it goes to wait for the driver - and that's probably your pie, five minutes from you, waiting for your wayward driver to come back. There are enough things that can influence the entire pizza delivery system, that it almost makes one wish for a replicator!
Hope this explains things for you! I did some research and, it appears they use servers based on the IBM iSeries systems. A number of factors, not just software, may be the culprit. Being a driver for one of the big pizza companies myself, I'd just like to add that the rush usually starts around 6 and ends about On Fridays and Saturdays, it starts earlier and ends later.
Friday is by a longshot the busiest day of the week, so you're most likely to get a late pizza on Friday during rush. The difference between ordering at and ordering at on Fridays can be enormous, i. Interestingly, April 14th is a huge night for pizza delivery, especially if it's a Friday or Saturday.
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