- TIME - by Courtney Subramanian - 3 hours agoAmazon CEO Jeff Bezos revealed an experimental drone-based delivery service on Sunday, in an ambitious move by the online retailer to ...
Amazon Chief Reveals Drone Delivery System
Unmanned delivery aircraft could be ready within five years
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos revealed an experimental drone-based delivery service on Sunday, in an ambitious move by the online retailer to capitalize on a technology still being used sparsely by American businesses. Bezos said the service, dubbed Amazon Prime Air, could be ready for customer use in “four or five years.”
“I know this looks like science fiction, it’s not,” Bezos said on 60 Minutes, adding that “this is early, this is still years away.”
(MORE: Amazon Prime Air: 5 Predictions About the Retailer’s Delivery Drones)
Bezos said the drone could carry objects of up to 5 lb. (2.27 kg) within a 10-mile (16 km) radius of an Amazon distribution center. Given that Amazon has been steadily building distribution centers in an increasing number of urban areas, the service would theoretically cover a significant number of customers.
The craft are autonomous, Bezos said — an Amazon employee would enter a delivery recipient’s location and away the aircraft would fly.
“The hard part here is putting in all the redundancy,” Bezos said. “All the reliability to say this can’t land on somebody’s head.”
Amazon’s drone delivery service will also have to comply with the Federal Aviation Administration’s new airspace rules for unmanned aircraft, which the agency is planning to have in place by 2015.
After the 60 Minutes segment aired, Amazon shared this footage showing the system in use:
In preview segments, Bezos promised “something he wanted to unveil for the first time,” leading people on Twitter to speculate that it could be an Amazon television. Others joked that perhaps Bezos would buy CBS (he stunned the media world when it was announced in August that he had bought the Washington Post for $250 million). At least one guesser hit the nail exactly on the head:
The segment’s timing capitalized on buzz surrounding Cyber Monday and the holiday shopping season.
I was trying to imagine how this might work. You live in the suburbs and you just woke up and opened your front door to get your newspaper only to be scared out of your mind by a giant bug like thing whirring up to you. So, you close the door quickly so it doesn't put out your eye with one of it's 4 to 6 quickly rotating propelers whirring and buzzing. You look through the window of your front door and wait until it left or you might take a quick video of it if you have time of it delivering your package of books or whatever and you post the video online so people can see the package delivered to your front door in the suburbs.
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Monday, December 2, 2013
Amazon Drone Delivery?
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