Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Transportation

Amazon Shows Off New All-Electric Prime Air Drone That Will Start Delivering Packages 'Within Months' (geekwire.com) 66

Amazon's drone ambitions took another step forward on Wednesday as the tech giant revealed its latest delivery drone design. From a report: At Amazon's re:MARS Conference, Amazon executive Jeff Wilke showed off a fully-electric drone that can fly up to 15 miles and deliver packages under five pounds in less than 30 minutes. The new drone will start making deliveries to customers "within months," Wilke said, but did not provide further details. The new hexagonal design looks quite different than the experimental drones that made Amazon Prime Air's first aerial drop-offs in England in 2016 and in California in 2017. "Our newest drone design includes advances in efficiency, stability and, most importantly, in safety," Wilke wrote in a blog post. "It is also unique, and it advances the state of the art. How so? First, it's a hybrid design. It can do vertical takeoffs and landings -- like a helicopter. And it's efficient and aerodynamic -- like an airplane. It also easily transitions between these two modes -- from vertical-mode to airplane mode, and back to vertical mode." Amazon added that these drones are going to use "stereo vision in parallel with sophisticated AI algorithms" to detect people and animals from above. "A customer's yard may have clotheslines, telephone wires, or electrical wires. Wire detection is one of the hardest challenges for low-altitude flights. Through the use of computer-vision techniques we've invented, our drones can recognize and avoid wires as they descend into, and ascend out of, a customer's yard," the company added in a statement.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Amazon Shows Off New All-Electric Prime Air Drone That Will Start Delivering Packages 'Within Months'

Comments Filter:
  • Noise (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 05, 2019 @01:47PM (#58714196)

    So judging by the video, the Amazon drones will be soaring through the air leaving behind a trail of beautiful piano sonatas, eh? Show us what it really sounds like and let us comment on whether we want them in the air above our neighborhoods...

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Show us what it really sounds like...

      What it really sounds like is your neighbor's package dropping on your roof. Dragging the ladder out of the garage. Screaming while falling off. And landing in the hedges.

      Again.

      • Re:Noise (Score:4, Funny)

        by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Wednesday June 05, 2019 @02:22PM (#58714480)

        that's fine, we don't have hedges here. so the scream will only happen once, then problem solved

      • I was thinking the sound will probably be more like a loud buzzing followed by a couple of shotgun blasts.

        On a side note - given that was obviously filmed in eastern Washington, they should've shown the drone navigating a field of wind turbines.

    • My bigger complaint with the video is the drone isn't carrying anything which (A) is the whole point and (B) seems somewhat at odds from transitioning from hover to plane mode.

      (Or does it only carry small cargo inside its body?)

      • "transitioning to airplane mode" is probably a bit misleading. It's more of a continuous gradient between more rotor lift and more wing lift.

        Bog standard helicopters get significant lift from forward motion, the rotor working as a long, skinny wing, and other parts working as crappy wings. Any multirotor needs to tilt forward in order to fly forward. As it flies tilted forward as a multirotor, the outrigger wing will develop some lift even at 1 knot airspeed. The faster it flies, the more lift the wing ge

    • Noise is part of it. I'd like to know Amazon's data retention policy for all of the video that their drones capture as they're flying around, looking into people's backyards and windows.

      I can choose not to allow Alexa into my home. I can't do anything about this.
  • but will it open boxes and lock it to keep packages safe from porch pirates. a lot of customers are now getting boxes that can be locked because of porch pirates becoming the norm.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Dude, the package is on your roof. Totally safe from porch pirates.

    • Well, yeah, actually, if you can have it delivered to you backyard that would help a lot. Not that backyards are impenetrable but usually harder to access and obviously cannot see the package from the street.
    • by b0bby ( 201198 )

      Lots of us live in places where this isn't a big problem. I've never had a package stolen from out front, plus If it's getting delivered in 30 minutes I'd imagine I could just wait for it to arrive.

  • by gdavidp ( 709900 ) on Wednesday June 05, 2019 @02:20PM (#58714454) Homepage
    Months... PLEASE! Unless we are talking about delivery between point-to-point drop off locations, where the customer has to go to pickup the package, I don't see how they are any where remotely capable of dealing with the realities of (1) aircraft carrying humans, does it file a flight plan with the local authorities (2) does it have a beacon to alert aircraft of it's position (3) how is it going to navigate into dense neighborhoods or even around trees (sometimes with no leaves on them) or hydro and communication poles, varying sizes of buildings of different reflective properties, not land on the retired lady sitting on her property watching the traffic go by or cutting off the curious children with their hands raised in the hair to capture said drone hovering over their heads? Some random demonstration of a drone flying in farming country with wild piano music in the background is not going to convince the public of the safety of said means of transportation of their product deliveries...
  • 72 of them
  • I can find the bird shot, rat shot and buck shot on you shelves . . .

    . . . but where is the drone shot . . . ?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I'm sure #8 shot will do fine. Good balance between destructive power but won't travel real far so it'll knock the drone out of the sky but won't inadvertently damage the neighbors house or risk injuring somebody.

      Just be careful where the drone is going to crash, because that might damage a neighbors house or injure somebody.

    • regular birdshot will do it. Oh and don't forget a Silencer [youtube.com] YMMV

  • by Vanyle ( 5553318 ) on Wednesday June 05, 2019 @02:42PM (#58714630)

    I see a new version of Pokemon go, except instead of a pokeball you shoot a arrow with a rope attached.

  • Personally I'd be fine with a drone dropping stuff on my porch or at the back of my home. I'd be more comfortable with it than having some random guy/gal coming up to my door.

    As for data collection, I have to laugh at the idea- not that it will be done, but at the fact that it's already being done. Everywhere, all the damn time.

    First of all, most of my home can be viewed from Google Earth and Street View. I don't care if they get imagery of my roof or side yard.

    Second, you're on camera almost everywhere you

    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      "Personally I'd be fine with a drone dropping stuff on my porch..."

      For those of us with covered porches, I'm wondering how they'll deal with it. Will they just leave it on the walkway, or driveway? I've had that happen before, only to get home and find a soaked box from the rain.

  • Orders a pound of FFFG Black Powder and a bottle of Diethyl Ether, and a 1000 strike anywhere matches.

    What could possibly go wrong? /s

  • I see theft and loss of merchandise going up a few years after this as people figure out and develop ways to steal from it. And then an escalation of arms.

    Wont need birdshot, and I'm sure they will go out of style quickly as thye can fly high enough to be out of reach easy, and firing guns within citi limits will bring unwanted attention....

    They launch places will be known ,and their loud buggers that can be found easily.

    I'm thinking people using their own drones, to take down or capture the slower moving

    • It's not theft if your trained falcon takes it down. Then it's prey.

      Please, order more meals to go from amazon, they get hungry.

"The medium is the message." -- Marshall McLuhan

Working...