But what if you already have that item? What if you know you have a Roboport somewhere and don't want to craft another one? Or if you want 10 fast inserters and nothing more. Currently, you must add the items to your logistics system request queue, then remove the entries when you are done.
Why not make it so that you can request individual items from the queue, individually or in batches? The requests could be similar to the crafting window interface in how the selection of number works.
I would suggest that this be unlocked in a technology that one researches after much of the other logistics system based technologies.
Here is an image to give you an idea of what I mean:

Thoughts?




 All you really need is a button below those "permanent" request slots. Have it open up a window just like when you're configuring a requester chest, with a "deliver" button which closes the window and sends the order to the bots. (Having that window list stored amounts the way he suggested would be nice, but not absolutely required.) Unlike permanent requests, if there aren't enough materials presently available, you'd probably only receive what was available at the time of the request (which is fine, and would be something to keep in mind when setting up smart inserter limits on your passive provider chests), unless something hidden under the surface tracks requests even without a persistent requester slot.
 All you really need is a button below those "permanent" request slots. Have it open up a window just like when you're configuring a requester chest, with a "deliver" button which closes the window and sends the order to the bots. (Having that window list stored amounts the way he suggested would be nice, but not absolutely required.) Unlike permanent requests, if there aren't enough materials presently available, you'd probably only receive what was available at the time of the request (which is fine, and would be something to keep in mind when setting up smart inserter limits on your passive provider chests), unless something hidden under the surface tracks requests even without a persistent requester slot.