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posted by martyb on Thursday December 15 2016, @04:17PM   Printer-friendly
from the zoom-zoom! dept.

According to The Guardian, Amazon has made real drone deliveries to real customers in Cambridge, UK. At present the "Prime Air" service is only available to two Amazon Prime customers with large gardens who happen to live close to Amazon's UK depot, but they hope to extend the service to dozens more in the coming months.

Apparently the drone was fully autonomous, with no human operator, and the time from placing an order to delivery was just 13 minutes. A video of the delivery can be found in the linked article.

Is this the future?


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by Unixnut on Thursday December 15 2016, @04:31PM

    by Unixnut (5779) on Thursday December 15 2016, @04:31PM (#441658)

    > Is this the future?

    From TFS:

    "Amazon Prime customers with large gardens who happen to live close to Amazon's UK depot, "

    The vast majority of people live in cities, with all kinds of obstacles, vandals, thieves, masses of pigeons, wires across roads, odd wind patterns between buildings, etc...
    Also, the vast majority of people live in little shoebox flats where a small balcony is a rare luxury, let alone a "large garden". Those are the things dreams are made of.
    Also the high cost of land/property in said cities means it is unlikely people will be near one of Amazons UK depots.

    I can see its utility in doing drone deliveries to country houses, small villages, etc... that are not cost effective to service with a dedicated delivery van. However I think the bulk of amazon delivery will still be done the old fashioned way, but a delivery man in a van, for the foreseeable future.

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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by bob_super on Thursday December 15 2016, @05:50PM

    by bob_super (1357) on Thursday December 15 2016, @05:50PM (#441694)

    Let me reword it for you "Amazon's rich Prime Air customers can now look forward to even more convenience than the rest of you poor sods! If that pisses you off, you can always try to get rich. We'll be happy to serve you, then."

    • (Score: 4, Insightful) by Nerdfest on Thursday December 15 2016, @05:53PM

      by Nerdfest (80) on Thursday December 15 2016, @05:53PM (#441697)

      Or they could just be starting with the easiest targets. It could be either, so I apologize if my far-out theory is incorrect.

    • (Score: 2) by Unixnut on Thursday December 15 2016, @06:22PM

      by Unixnut (5779) on Thursday December 15 2016, @06:22PM (#441708)

      Not a problem actually. I don't mind it. If the rich want to pay a bit more to have amazon stuff delivered by their very own personal drone, go for it. They already have a lot of other privileges that peons such as myself can only dream of. No point being bitter and covetous about it.

      Just saying it is unlikely to be "the future", implying a replacement wholesale of the current infrastructure. Maybe for the select few, sure I can see it, but it will be a minority thing in the whole system.

      For me, having amazon stuff arrive at my office, handled by the mailroom and left on my desk is convenient enough. Don't even bother with amazon prime because of it.

  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Thursday December 15 2016, @07:15PM

    by frojack (1554) on Thursday December 15 2016, @07:15PM (#441726) Journal

    The vast majority of people live in cities, with all kinds of obstacles, vandals, thieves, masses of pigeons, wires across roads, odd wind patterns between buildings, etc...

    I see nothing in the above that will present a problem to a drone. Unless you live in the city center, flying at 200 (agl) feet avoids ALL of that.

    Vandals and thieves are already a problem for package delivery especially when people are not home. But apparently its manageable, insurable, or simply not as big a deal as you suggest.

    Looking around my neighborhood (Washington State) there are no such problems other than the occasional 100 foot trees. Even off-the-shelf autonomous drones can optically avoid those these days.

    The big problem is packages dumped in lawn or driveway, rather than on the porch, by the door, out of the weather, simply because drones can't yet maneuver reliably in tight quarters like your typical suburban entry.

    --
    No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.
    • (Score: 2) by Immerman on Thursday December 15 2016, @07:50PM

      by Immerman (3985) on Thursday December 15 2016, @07:50PM (#441737)

      Unfortunately, most of those become an issue as soon as your drone finishes the "travel from warehouse to target address" phase and begins the "deliver the package" phase, then it has to deal with the erratic wind, pigeons, wires, etc. as it approaches it's delivery point.

      Still, I could see that being handled well enough in time, if maybe not right away. And if the goal is 30-minute deliveries, as I think I've heard, then thieves can be minimized as well - the recipient knows it's on the way, and you can send them a text message saying "Package delivery will be completed in 2 minutes" so that they can be waiting to pick it up as soon as the drone has departed, not unlike waiting for the knock from a pizza delivery person.

      As for vandalism - that's harder to prevent, but it's already ridiculously easy to throw rocks at moving cars, but it doesn't happen often. Probably because it's generally pretty easy to ID the perpetrator, and there's no benefit to outweigh the cost.

    • (Score: 2) by LoRdTAW on Thursday December 15 2016, @08:19PM

      by LoRdTAW (3755) on Thursday December 15 2016, @08:19PM (#441749) Journal

      How about this location in my neighborhood: https://goo.gl/maps/7uSUJiQa4Sq [goo.gl] Those are apartments so, maybe yard access? Maybe not. Too many random obstacles. I'd like to see more Amazon lockers. Currently I have everything shipped to work and since I commute by car, it's easy to bring home.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 15 2016, @07:51PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 15 2016, @07:51PM (#441739)

    Yes we should throw brilliant ideas away because not everyone can use them equally... that is not an example of innovation-Marxism at all.