Found this thread through Google while looking into some fleet logistics stuff and wanted to chime in. No one is typing 400 addresses into a GPS, that would be a total nightmare.
The way it actually works is pretty seamless. They just sync the city's utility billing data straight into a mapping system, and the dispatcher draws a digital boundary around a whole neighborhood.
The software automatically grabs every active customer inside that shape and sequences them into a continuous loop. I've messed around with some modern waste management platforms like CurbWaste before, and the tech automatically factors in things like keeping the truck's helper arm on the right side of the street and avoiding tight dead-ends. The driver just follows a line on an in-cab tablet and never has to look at an actual address.
The way it actually works is pretty seamless. They just sync the city's utility billing data straight into a mapping system, and the dispatcher draws a digital boundary around a whole neighborhood.
The software automatically grabs every active customer inside that shape and sequences them into a continuous loop. I've messed around with some modern waste management platforms like CurbWaste before, and the tech automatically factors in things like keeping the truck's helper arm on the right side of the street and avoiding tight dead-ends. The driver just follows a line on an in-cab tablet and never has to look at an actual address.