Cringely Predicts: Professional Drivers With Drone Landing Platforms (cringely.com) 113
In what may be his final year of technology predictions, columnist Robert X. Cringely argues aerial delivery drones "are definitely coming just as fast as regulators will allow them, but I don't think they'll be implemented in the way people expect."
As soon as autonomous systems can be shown to be as safe or safer than human pilots, they'll take over most drone piloting duties... Here's the problem with Pizza-to-the-Home: where does the drone land at your house that won't risk hitting a child, pet or vehicle and also won't risk losing the delivery to theft or damage? We can't economically mandate a drone landing tower for every house that's above obstacles and with a guaranteed clear approach.... But we CAN mandate such a landing platform on top of every pizza delivery vehicle.
Using GPS, the drone and car can find each other with the drone landing only when the car is stopped and the approach is clear... [F]or that driver each delivery will take five minutes or less. Pizza is delivered faster and hotter and the driver, instead of making 2-3 deliveries per hour, can make 10-12. This is what we'll shortly see proposed for drone delivery, not just for pizza but for everything else...
Now here's where Internet-style disintermediation comes into play. Such a drone delivery network still costs money to build but that money will be instantly available if the class of goods that can be delivered expands beyond food to anything weighing under, say, 10 pounds. This means prescription drugs and even Amazon Prime or walmart.com packages can arrive on the same car, delivered to that car by multiple drones and drone networks. All it requires is WAAS GPS and a standardized car rooftop landing platform, which I am sure we will shortly see.
Using GPS, the drone and car can find each other with the drone landing only when the car is stopped and the approach is clear... [F]or that driver each delivery will take five minutes or less. Pizza is delivered faster and hotter and the driver, instead of making 2-3 deliveries per hour, can make 10-12. This is what we'll shortly see proposed for drone delivery, not just for pizza but for everything else...
Now here's where Internet-style disintermediation comes into play. Such a drone delivery network still costs money to build but that money will be instantly available if the class of goods that can be delivered expands beyond food to anything weighing under, say, 10 pounds. This means prescription drugs and even Amazon Prime or walmart.com packages can arrive on the same car, delivered to that car by multiple drones and drone networks. All it requires is WAAS GPS and a standardized car rooftop landing platform, which I am sure we will shortly see.
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Cringely?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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And no it's not going to hover over you and drop the pizza.
I beg to differ [canberratimes.com.au]
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Before you bother with flight at all, note that there is an immediate efficiency to be gained, by building driver-less motorcycle trikes for food delivery. Less weight, better fuel efficiency than a car. And we haven't even gotten self-driving cars to work 100% of the time yet...
The entire desire for airborne commercial/residential drone deli
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Fed Ex and UPS would have to run a second delivery shift in order to have evening delivery. And that means paying adjusted rate to their drivers . And in addition their entire delivery logistics at the delivery stations would have to be rethought, likely the entire building would have to be rebuilt from the ground up. The dock doors for the morning runs have those trucks in them once they come back and are busy being unloaded from
Aspiring to stopped-clock accuracy (Score:4, Insightful)
Has anything printed under the "Robert X. Cringley" nom de plume ever been correct?
You will print a target (Score:3)
The target will be a QR code. You will agree on the rough location of the target during the process. The process of downloading and printing the target will also include agreeing that you're responsible for putting it someplace sensible.
If the drone gets there and it doesn't look like a good place to drop a pizza, you will have to go somewhere else to get your pizza.
Nowhere in this process will there be a driver, except to pick up failed drones. That person can be the assistant manager.
Re: You will print a target (Score:2)
What training? Just have a human from the company visit each house once to confirm the spot is acceptable.
Then no more humans are needed ever again.
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People keep forgetting probably the most important aspect of any kind of flight: knowing where the other planes (aerial vehicles) are.
The major limitation of aerial delivery systems is not the landing zones, it's the flight path and avoiding other aerial vehicles.
Such a system will not only need a sophisticated shared information system with real-time, accurate GPS coordinates from each drone, but be able to communicate information about potential collisions to drones in flight.
Unlike most ca
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The major limitation of aerial delivery systems is not the landing zones, it's the flight path and avoiding other aerial vehicles.
This could be solved with any combination of transponders, with centralized traffic control managed via cellular network, and actual sensing and avoidance hardware. The combination of all three (and maybe something I haven't thought of) would be the most intelligent, but also the most expensive. It takes relatively little logic for GPS-aware devices to avoid one another if transponders are used. Granted, that information can be used to attack drones, so centralized management is probably the best answer
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Or you will buy a sturdy-ish reusable mat with a preprinted QR code. You scan your landing pad when placing order.
I like this, it should be larger than most people can print anyway. Maybe they could make a pizza box that unfolds into the target. That reduces manual deliveries to one. Include an insert with a foil or plastic protective layer to contain grease.
Yeah right (Score:2, Insightful)
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Pizzas aren't drugs (Score:5, Interesting)
But the density of pizza deliveries is the limiting factor. At any given time there are not likely to be more than 1 pizza per square mile (as different people will order at different times) so what takes the greatest amount of time is getting the delivery van to the correct location. Whether to deliver the pizza directly or simply to receive it from the drone.
The scheme fails.
No. (Score:3)
Here's the issue, vehicles are owned by the drivers themselves, not the pizza place. Don't expect drivers to install a huge-ass drone platform on their car and provide their own drone or for pizza places to suddenly invest in vehicles and/or drones.
There is no driving incentive to reduce delivery time or do away with driver tipping (that's less money for the driver, so yo have to pay them more), so it's not happening. The only way this makes sense is if they can reduce the number of pizza places needed to serve an area but this is countered by the fact that traffic limits the area that can be served.
These guys ("Robert X. Cringely") know nothing about running a pizza business.
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Don't expect drivers to install a huge-ass drone platform on their car
Well, thanks to the miracle of magnetic fields, many of them already put huge-ass lighted signs on top of their cars.
You want UL certification for "drone platform" (Score:2)
Re:No. (Score:5, Interesting)
So let's explore this. The Pizza parlor invests in nine 1.5 meter square pieces of plywood painted with a high-contrast landing pattern, with suction cups and straps to tie them onto drivers cars. Let's call that $500. They invest in a dozen big drones capable of carrying, say, four extra-large meat lovers pizzas in an insulated pouch - Let's call that $25000, dwarfing the cost of the landing platforms.
Now, the Pizza parlor hires nine drivers for a Friday evening, straps platforms onto their cars, and sends each to a different area surrounding the parlor. An order comes in, the pizza comes out of the oven and gets popped into the heated box under a drone, the drone goes and finds the closest driver. The driver may be in front of the desired house at the moment, or may be at the previous house - the drone lands, driver moves pizzas to his front seat, and delivers them to the desired house and collects his tip. If the driver is in motion, he pulls into the nearest parking lot, waits for the drone to land, and collects the pizzas.
From the Customer's point of view, nothing changes in the current pizza-delivery model except their pizza arrives in 15 minutes instead of 45, and is likely hotter when it gets there. From the Driver's point of view, they deliver more pizzas per hour with fewer miles driven. From the Pizza Parlor's perspective, they've made a huge capital investment, but they're delivering 2-3x the pizzas they used to. From everyone else's perspective, there's a constant stream of annoying drones flying overhead (and occasionally crashing into their neighborhood) destroying their ability to peacefully enjoy their backyards. I guess that's an externality that just doesn't need to be considered.
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I live on a busy road, I bet these things would be no more noisy than the constant traffic, vehicles are noisy even when only travelling 25mph. Drones could fly a bit higher to cut noise pollution.
Separate note, the summary is dumb, landing pads wouldn't need to be mandated, you just say: If you don't have a landing pad available that meets specifications xyz then you can't legally have drones delivered to you a
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And who can't stick up a flat bird table like thing for the fast food to be dropped on to, not difficult.
People in apartment buildings and condos? I'm not going to order and then head downstairs with a landing pad to wait for the delivery which could take 10 to 30 minutes (or longer if the place is busy). Then you have to bring the order back up along with the landing pad. Maybe the building would have a permanent landing pad to save you the bother of having to take one down with you. But you would still have to go down early because who knows how long it takes for an elevator to come so you can't go down when
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From everyone else's perspective, there's a constant stream of annoying drones flying overhead (and occasionally crashing into their neighborhood) destroying their ability to peacefully enjoy their backyards. I guess that's an externality that just doesn't need to be considered.
That's why Amazon is going to have their drones fly in at altitude, balloon down to complete the delivery [slashgear.com] and back up, out of the annoyingly loud range.
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Amazon is going to have their drones fly in at altitude, balloon down to complete the delivery and back up, out of the annoyingly loud range.
No they aren't. It's a cute idea, but impractical for a variety of reasons. Quads really aren't that loud anyway.
insurance (Score:2)
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They invest in a dozen big drones capable of carrying, say, four extra-large meat lovers pizzas in an insulated pouch - Let's call that $25000, dwarfing the cost of the landing platforms.
$25000 for a dozen? That would be a steal! To carry that much weight, you would be lucky to get one drone for $25000. That doesn't even cover the cost of insurance for the drones.
From the Pizza Parlor's perspective, they've made a huge capital investment, but they're delivering 2-3x the pizzas they used to.
Except they are already meeting demand (if they need more drivers then they hire more), so they aren't going to get more sales, just reduce the number of drivers. So your investment in drones is really just a way to have fewer drivers. Drivers are cheap but these drones are expensive. One lost/damaged drone is going to cost a
Re:No. (Score:4, Insightful)
These guys ("Robert X. Cringely") know nothing about running a pizza business.
Perhaps he should read Snowcrash?
But it is funny, to watch how the "drone industry" is searching for a problem to solve.
I doubt we ever will have something that is worth building up a drone delivery infrastructure.
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I doubt we ever will have something that is worth building up a drone delivery infrastructure.
They are actually good for inspections, so they do have legitimate uses. However, they have been found to be very useful for illegitimate purposes. It's currently being used to reach nearly inaccessible locations like prisons. However, in the future I could foresee them being used to drop off drugs to avoid having a physical presence.
Re: Drone pirate (Score:2)
That's a stupid idea. 22LR has a huge range and can potentially kill someone from 1000 ft away if you miss. Use birdshot out of a 410 shotgun shell. If the drone aims > 30 degrees above the horizon there's no chance of collateral damage. In a couple hundred feet it'll be basically sand.
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I'm sure there is a way to fix that.. Perhaps put tubes underground for the drones? Perhaps the droned could then even be propelled by compressed air? I'm sure that will be the NextBigThing(TM)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Professional Drivers == Pizza Delivery? (Score:1)
a car ? isn't the point to eliminate the car ? (Score:1)
if the vehicle is remotely piloted, then the "pilot" can very easily check to see if your beloved pet is in the way using the camera feed.
also too, a landing pad high up clear of obstructions is not necessary. a very plan target, in white or other solid color, so that on object would stand out. Even an automated check system, will probably work. AI can give you a definite "no", but a person is required for a "yes".
Drones are coming, that's for sure.
So is incredible unemployment. The 2nd gilded age is her
Customer car target (Score:2)
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Not everyone has a car and not everyone has a house to go along with their car.
This system is designed for people who have houses and now you want to limit that to people who have houses and cars. I would say that the people without cars should be the ones that need delivery more than the ones with the cars.
The Powers That Be.. (Score:1)
Here in the Land-of-Oz a certain department (CASA) mandates where you can fly your favorite muti-rotor-copter.
There's even an App for it. Trust me, it's bloody restrictive as to where one can take off as "they" fret over real helicopters getting struck.
Got a helipad within 5 klicks? Forget it. Flying over private property - no way! Just as a couple of examples.
Where are we going to land? (Score:2)
I can think of plenty of places where city streets are on hills. Plus throw in weather (rain, sleet, snow, freezing rain) and a drone landing on a car that is parked on a slope is a drone that is crashed in the street and run over by a car and then everyone has lawsuits and insurance payouts.
This need to go back to the drawing boards with a bit more reality attached.
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Electromagnets. Wouldn't need to be that strong so they wouldn't eat up too much battery life. All controlled by the drone. Turned on when it lands and as it takes off the electromagnets are turned off.
Since there's a driver any major accumulation of snow, freezing rain, etc would be taken care of by the driver so that's not a problem.
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I actually see the snow being a real problem: target recognition. Requiring drivers to get out of their car during a snow storm to clear the targets mounted on the roof so the drone can see the landing target? During a h
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Aluminum in cars isn't a problem since the driver puts a landing pad on the roof and the landing pad would have some light metal in it in order for the electromagnets to attract to.
As for the driver having to constantly clear off the landing pad, that's not an issue either. The drone can send a message when it's a minute or 30 seconds away and the driver can then clear the landing pad. Or the drone will hover when it arrives until the driver clears the landing pad. Not a big issue.
I'm not advocating for thi
Solved problem, but not this way (Score:2)
There are a lot of people experimenting in this space. Unsurprisingly this problem has been considered with far better solutions than this suggestion.
The Alphabet Project Wing system for example doesn't land. It remains at a safe distance above the ground and lowers the load.
This avoids any direct interaction between members of the public and the fragile dangerous drone.
The risk of theft is significantly mitigated by being able to schedule delivery times to correspond to when you are at home. No need to lea
High Tech (Score:2)
So rather than having my pizza delivered by the pizza delivery guy in his car, pizza delivery guy will drive his car to my house and wait for drone to appear out of the sky with pizza.
They will use machine learning AI to figure out where to pre-position the landing sites (pizza delivery guys). Pizzas will be 3-D printed and accounted for using blockchain. .....
Why land? (Score:1)
Not pizza. Platform as a service. (Score:2)
A ton of delivery cost is "last mile" (not literally, basically from the facility to the door). This is talking about dividing that into two pieces - "to the door" from a mobile landing platform so basically the last 30-100 feet and "to the platform" which is most of that so-called last mile. The Platform As A Service driver or vehicle doesn't have to cover all that range back to the facility - just the quarter mi
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Robert X. Cringely. *facepalm* How is this clueless, know-nothing douchebag still getting attention from anyone?
And he's not even the original Robert X. Cringely, although he somehow managed to wrangle some sort of legal agreement allowing him to claim that he is.