Pot startups are delivering medical marijuana using knock-offs of the on-demand model pioneered by Uber and Lyft. At least three services — Flash Buds, SpeedWeed and Nugg — keep Los Angeles buzzed, while Eaze and Meadow do the same for San Francisco. Pull out your smartphone, choose your strain and a car is on its way with your smoke. (See next story for more.)

Other companies sell software that tracks marijuana cultivation and inventory, a la Salesforce.com or SAP. There’s an Etsy-inspired marketplace for handcrafted glass pipes called Leafcart, and even a Kickstarter-like crowdfunding site for cannabis investors.

Last month, I spoke with Dhaval Shah, who runs Ganja Boxes. The name sort of says it all; Shah is borrowing the box-of-the-month concept that Dollar Shave Club uses for razors and BirchBox for makeup. Except Ganja Boxes is selling high-end paraphernalia that would look at home on Pottery Barn shelves.

Shah tells me he got the idea for Ganja Boxes as he watched his fiancee unpack a monthly supply of beauty products. “I was like, ‘I want a box. I want a box with cannabis accessories,’” he says.

Later this month, smokers will be able to order monthly or quarterly boxes at $45 or $80 a pop from the Boulder-based startup. But Shah gave me an early peek of what to expect.

A Ganja Box arrives at my San Francisco office. It isn’t subtle. One side features a map of Jamaica, the other a map of India, where I learn the term “ganja” originated.

My colleagues needle me to open it. So I do.

Buried under wood curl packaging, I find a plastic grinder, “organic hemp natural unbleached” rolling papers, a joint holder Hunter S. Thompson would have used and a box of breath mints bearing the legend, “Tastes so Good, It should be Illegal.” There is also a home drug-testing kit and a polished-wood one-hitter.

The one-hitter quickly disappears from my desk.

Shah isn’t the only cannabis entrepreneur imitating existing companies. TravelTHC, which features 420 “marijuana-friendly” rental properties in Colorado and Washington, cops from Airbnb. So does Bud and Breakfast, which lists 169 rentals where you can get a blaze on. High-end stoners can book a seven-acre estate in Steamboat Springs, Colorado, for $2,500 a night.

Looking for pot reviews and recommendations? Turn to Leafly, a Yelp for dispensaries and strains. It even has Buzzfeed-style quizzes, like one titled, “Which Cannabis Sativa Strain Are You?” Last month, 7 million people visited the site.

There’s also Ananas, a maker of high-tech, “medical grade” smoking devices; the Hemp Business Journal, an online publication devoted to the cannabis industry; and Grownetics, a software company helping farmers grow bigger buds.