Wednesday, 20 May 2015

Amazon tests delivery drones at secret Canada site after US frustration

Amazon is testing its drone delivery service at a secret site in Canada, following repeated warnings by the e-commerce giant that it would go outside the US to bypass what it sees as the US federal government’s lethargic approach to the new technology.
The largest internet retailer in the world is keeping the location of its new test site closely guarded. What can be revealed is that the company’s formidable team of roboticists, software engineers, aeronautics experts and pioneers in remote sensing – including a former Nasa astronaut and the designer of the wingtip of the Boeing 787 – are now operating in British Columbia.
The end goal is to utilise what Amazon sees as a slice of virgin airspace – above 200ft, where most buildings end, and below 500ft, where general aviation begins. Into that aerial slice the company plans to pour highly autonomous drones of less than 55lbs, flying through corridors 10 miles or longer at 50mph and carrying payloads of up to 5lbs that account for 86% of all the company’s packages.

Amazon has acquired a plot of open land lined by oak trees and firs, where it is conducting frequent experimental flights with the full blessing of the Canadian government. As if to underline the significance of the move, the test site is barely 2,000ft from the US border, which was clearly visible from where the Guardian stood on a recent visit.
The Guardian was invited to visit Amazon’s previously undisclosed Canadian drone test site, where it has been conducting outdoor flights for the past few months. For the duration of the visit, three plain-clothed security guards kept watch from the surrounding hills.
Amazon’s drone visionaries are taking the permissive culture on the Canadian side of the border and using it to fine-tune the essential features of what they hope will become a successful delivery-by-drone system. The Guardian witnessed tests of a hybrid drone that can take off and land vertically as well as fly horizontally.
The company’s decision to set up camp in Canada, after frustration in its attempts to persuade US regulators to allow it to launch its drones in Washington state, takes Amazon’s quarrel with the federal government to a new level. Last week a senior Amazon executive appeared before a US Senate subcommittee and warned that there would be consequences if federal regulators continued to act as a drag on its ambitions to launch a drone delivery service called Prime Air.
What Paul Misener, the company’s vice-president for global public policy, did not tell senators was that at the very moment he appeared before them, Amazon drones were buzzing in the skies just north of the border.
The company wants to offer its customers the ability to have packages dropped on their doorstep by flying robots within 30 minutes of ordering goods online. With innovation in the drone sector reaching lightning speeds, Amazon said it was not prepared to curtail its ambitions because of what Misener said was a lack of “impetus” on the US side of the border.
“We think that this new technology will provide huge benefits for our customers, who we think will love it, and for society more broadly,” he told the Guardian a day after the subcommittee hearing. “Why would we wait?”
Gur Kimchi
Pinterest
Gur Kimchi is the architect of Prime Air, Amazon’s planned domestic drone delivery service. ‘We do what’s necessary,’ he said. ‘We go to places where we can test outside.’ Photograph: Amazon
Gur Kimchi, the architect and head of Prime Air, said the hope had always been to develop the drone service in the US, close to the company’s Seattle headquarters. “But we’re limited there to flying indoors and have been now for a very long time. So we do what’s necessary – we go to places where we can test outside, in this case Canada.”
Drone technology is seen by many tech companies and aeronautics experts as the next frontier for innovation, with billions of dollars potentially in the balance. Traditionally, the US has been at the vanguard of both tech and aviation innovation, but the approach of the the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA), a US regulatory body, has been markedly tentative so far compared with that of regulators in Canada and Europe.
Brendan Schulman, a New York-based specialist in drone law, said the Guardian’s disclosure of Amazon’s Canadian airstrip-in-exile should be a “serious wake-up call to politicians and regulators”.
“America has led the world in aviation development,” he said, “but for the first time in history we are at risk of losing out. To see one of our most innovative companies forced over the border is a stark example of the danger.”
Until it opened its Canadian base, Amazon had been limited to indoor testing in its Seattle laboratory, backed up with research outposts in the UK – in Cambridge – and Israel. Requests by the company to begin outdoor testing on company land in Washington state have so far largely been rebuffed by the FAA.
The federal agency recently published its guidelines for commercial use of small drones. The new rules will take at least two years to come into effect, a delay which Amazon finds unacceptable.
Last July, the company applied for a so-called 333 exemption that would allow it to carry out outdoor experimentation immediately. Eight months later, the FAA has not responded.
The federal body did agree last week, amid considerable fanfare, to award the company a so-called “experimental airworthiness certificate” that can be used to test a specific model of drone. But it took so long for the certificate to come through that by the time it was granted, Amazon said it was obsolete.
“The pace of innovation is so great at this point that our designs are changing very quickly,” Misener told the Guardian.
The contrast between the relative rigidity of the FAA’s approach to drone testing and the relatively relaxed regulatory regime in Canada is startling. Under the Canadian system, Amazon has been granted a virtual carte blanche regarding its entire fleet of drones within its designated airspace, having gone through a licensing process that took just three weeks.
By comparison, it takes the FAA many months to grant approval. Sources familiar with the process told the Guardian the US regulator insists on an initial 23-page application, a review of 75 pages of further documentation and a four-hour presentation at FAA headquarters followed by a three-hour site visit, together with ongoing reporting and record-keeping obligations.
Early experiments in Canada have focused on a range of individual drone capabilities: sensors that can detect and avoid obstacles in a drone’s path; link-loss procedures that control the aircraft should its connection with base be broken; stability in wind and turbulence; and environmental impact. Once each of these facets has been perfected, a new Amazon prototype drone will be assembled that Kimchi predicted would be utterly safe and wholly unlike anything seen before.
“We are going to end up with unique shapes, unique vehicles. The most important part is to develop strong confidence that our system is safe and that we can demonstrate that to customers,” he said.
“You can build a very different world. It can be faster, and safer, and more economic and more environmentally friendly – all of those things, all at the same time.”

FAA – a uniquely difficult job?

Amazon drone
A now outdated iteration of an Amazon domestic delivery drone. The company keeps its new models strictly under wraps. Photograph: Amazon/EPA
The FAA argues that the US has a uniquely difficult job in safeguarding the nation’s skies. It emphasises that it is responsible for the largest, most complex airspace in the world, which, unlike other countries’, is used by a large general aviation fleet.
“Different laws and regulatory structures in other nations may allow them to act more quickly to approve certain UAS [drone] operations,” an FAA spokesman told the Guardian. “Everything we do is safety-oriented, and we base our approvals for unmanned aircraft operations on an assessment of the risks to other aircraft and to people and property on the ground. We have been working diligently with Amazon to get the information we need.”
Misener said he respected the FAA’s desire to keep America’s airspace as safe as possible. “That’s our top priority in Amazon Prime Air too,” he said.
But he questioned the FAA’s portrayal of America’s unique position: “The US does have a complex airspace, but it’s no more complex than in Europe, where regulators do allow testing, and it’s certainly not complex beneath 500ft or in rural areas of Washington state where we had planned to operate.”
The numbers speak for themselves. The FAA has received more than 750 requests for outdoor drone testing licenses from American businesses, Amazon’s among them, but so far has granted just 48. Canada’s equivalent civil aviation authority, Transport Canada, released 1,672 commercial drone certificates last year alone.
Diana Cooper, head of drones and robotics at the Canadian law firm Labarge Weinstein, said that in recent months several US companies had contacted her to inquire about opportunities in her country – a phenomenon that she believes will be boosted further by Amazon’s decision to join the fold.
“Amazon will definitely be a trendsetter,” she said, “and will result in a lot of other large American companies like Google and Facebook looking at our market as well.”
Another battle is already on the horizon. The FAA has stated bluntly it does not believe that drones can be flown safely under their own autonomous control, and is insisting that humans must keep them within eyesight at all times. That is a deal-breaker for Amazon Prime Air, which could only function if drones were able to fly well beyond visual line of sight.
Here too, the contrast between the uncertainty of the US regulators and the can-do attitude of their Canadian and European equivalents is striking. A huge area of Alberta covering 700 square nautical miles of restricted airspace has already been set aside to allow for drones to be tested beyond visual line of sight. In Europe a similar facility is being opened in Wales.
Misener believes that with such opportunities exploding beyond US borders, it is only a matter of time before the FAA is forced to accept that drones are here to stay.
“This technology is going to work,” he said. “It’s coming.”

Thursday, 12 February 2015

Amazon's drone dreams come crashing down: US regulators ban package delivery services using 'model aircraft'

The drone delivery dreams of Amazon boss Jess Bezos have come crashing down after regulators ruled that delivery services are too dangerous.
The Federal Aviation Administration has said that Amazon and other firms cannot use drones to deliver packages.
The ruling is part of an FAA document seeking public comment on its policy on drones, or what the agency calls 'model aircraft.'

Future: Amazon's Prime Air project is described as 'a new delivery system that will get packages into customers' hands in 30 minutes or less using unmanned aerial vehicles'
Future: Amazon's Prime Air project is described as 'a new delivery system that will get packages into customers' hands in 30 minutes or less using unmanned aerial vehicles'


HOW IT WORKS

The Internet shopping giant’s chief executive Jeff Bezos said that he wants to use octocoptors to replace postmen and cut delivery times to just 30 minutes.
Customers would have their order dropped onto their front lawn by the machine which would fly through the air from a nearby warehouse with it clasped in a metal grabber.
Firms such as DHL are also working on drone delivery projects.
Under a graphic that says what is barred, the FAA mentioned the 'Delivering of packages to people for a fee.'
This is clarified in a footnote saying: 'If an individual offers free shipping in association with a purchase or other offer, FAA would construe the shipping to be in furtherance of a business purpose, and thus, the operation would not fall within the statutory requirement of recreation or hobby purpose.'
The agency has said that it would revisit the commercial application of small drones later this year, with potential new rules in place perhaps by the end of 2015.
Brendan Schulman, the New York lawyer who convinced a federal judge to declare that the FAA is illegally enforcing a commercial ban on drones, told ArsTechnica the new rules were an attack on commercial use of drones.
'It's a purported new legal basis telling people to stop operating model aircraft for business purposes,' he said.


Amazon has admitted the project may take some time.
'Putting Prime Air into commercial use will take some number of years as we advance the technology and wait for the necessary FAA rules and regulations,' the firm has previously warned.
Amazon is serious about using drones to deliver items to its customers, and is close to developing the technology to make it a reality, the company's CEO has claimed.
On their way: Jeff Bezos said testing of '5th and 6th generation aerial vehicles' was currently underway, adding that more drones - perhaps the models that will be put into active service - were in the design phase
On their way: Jeff Bezos said testing of '5th and 6th generation aerial vehicles' was currently underway, adding that more drones - perhaps the models that will be put into active service - were in the design phase

In his annual letter to shareholders, which was made public earlier this year, Jeff Bezos gave an update on the Seattle-based company's achievements in 2013 - including a reference to drone development.
Bezos said testing of '5th and 6th generation aerial vehicles' was currently underway, adding that more drones - perhaps the models that will be put into active service - were in the design phase.
Bezos made reference to a Amazon's 'Prime Air' team carrying out the drone testing during his letter to shareholders.
Amazon describes Prime Air as 'a new delivery system that will get packages into customers' hands in 30 minutes or less using unmanned aerial vehicles'.
Ongoing: Jeff Bezos said Amazon is continuing to develop and test technology for delivery drones
Ongoing: Jeff Bezos said Amazon is continuing to develop and test technology for delivery drones

Earlier in the letter, Bezos said Amazon had made dramatic improvements to its delivery service in 2013 - including offering Sunday delivery in selected U.S. cities, introducing 'last mile' delivery networks in the U.K., and employing bike couriers in countries where deliveries could be slowed down by postal difficulties, such as China and India.


He then added: 'And there is more invention to come.
'The Prime Air team is already flight testing our 5th and 6th generation aerial vehicles, and we are in the design phase on generations 7 and 8.'
This brief reference to Prime Air has been enough to lead to renewed speculation over when customers can expect to have their items delivered by drone.
A recent court ruling removed one not-insignificant obstacle in Amazon's quest, by removing the  Federal Aviation Administration's authority to ban small unmanned aircraft being flown over U.S. airspace for commercial purposes.
This effectively gave businesses the right to fly small drones for the purposes of professional photography, journalism or farmland surveying.
It also, theoretically, allowed Amazon to introduce a drone-based delivery service - until the rules were clarified today.
In his letter to shareholders, Bezos remained realistic about the chances of Prime Air testing turning into an fully-fledged delivery service, however.
'Failure comes part and parcel with invention. It’s not optional', he said.
Bezos went on to explain that Amazon would continuing working on drones 'until we get it right' and it becomes 'something that is really working for customers.'
'[At that point] we double-down on it with hopes to turn it into an even bigger success', Bezos added.

Saturday, 22 March 2014

Federal Judge Clears Detroit Florist’s Delivery By Drone

COMMERCE TWP. (WWJ) - A federal judge’s ruling last week that the Federal Aviation Administration has no jurisdiction over small drone aircraft means a Commerce Township florist will resume testing flower delivery by drone.
FlowerDeliveryExpress.com, the online unit of Wesley Berry Flowers, was testing drone delivery the weekend before Valentine’s Day, but was ordered to stop by the FAA.
(The Feb. 8 delivery can be seen in the YouTube video below).

But last week, federal administrative law judge Patrick Geraghty ruled that if he accepted the FAA’s argument for regulating drones, “a flight in the air of a paper airplane or a toy balsa wood glider could subject the operator” to FAA penalties. The ruling applies to flights below 400 feet.
Geraghty was ruling in the case of a photographer who was fined $10,000 for “reckless flying” after using a drone to shoot a promotional video for the University of Virginia in 2011.
Bloomberg reported that FAA rules on drones weighing less than 55 pounds are still due out by November. The rules have been delayed more than three years.
But now that there are apparently no rules, Berry said, “the next step for us is more testing. We still want to be good citizens. We have to do some more testing on it and develop it into a more seamless and available product.”
The testing will prove out the drone delivery concept in terms of payload and range, Berry said. He said he didn’t know when drone delivery might be available to the general public.
“Our anticipation is that it’s still going to take a little while in order to become a commercially viable product,” Berry said. “Long term we expect this to be something very viable, but the only way we can get there is by doing the tests.”
Berry Flowers has locations in downtown Detroit, northwest Detroit and Commerce Township in the northwest suburbs. Berry said the testing would take place “in the Commerce area.”
Berry heard from the FAA by phone after posting the YouTube video of the Feb. 8 delivery test. Curiously enough, Berry said, “the FAA didn’t call us up this time to let us know” about the court ruling.
Consumers can sign up for the beta test group at http://www.FlowerDeliveryExpress.com/beta. Participation is not guaranteed, and you must be a U.S. resident.
FlowerDeliveryExpress.com delivers from its own brick and mortar flower shops with its own delivery fleet, and through FedEx and UPS from coast to coast. Deliveries are also made via a computerized sending network of affiliated shops. The company provides delivery throughout most of the United States, Canada, and more than 80 countries around the world.

How Delivery Drones Could Save Lives in Africa

How Delivery Drones Could Save Lives in AfricaSEXPAND
What the first thing you think of when you hear the word "drone?" It might be killing machines. Or reconnaissance quadcopters. Or maybe a honey bee. But for a countless number of people in Africa, it could be a flying packmule with life-saving cargo.
On Monday, the organizers of the Flying Donkey Challenge announced the first 33 entrants in a series of events that will culminate in a drone race around Mount Kenya in 24 hours and a multi-million dollar prize for the winner. This specific group hails from all over the world and will compete in a subchallenge from November 8 through the 16 in Kenya, though the final challenge will take place in 2020. For now, each team has proposed a design for a so-called "flying donkey," an unmanned aerial vehicle capable of delivering and collecting cargo that weighs about 45 pounds.
The overarching idea, here, is obvious: Build a better cargo drone, get more cargo to more people in Africa. "Commercial drone technology has strong potential here to help overcome the limitations of the continent's transportation infrastructure and deliver goods and services in remote regions—spurring new models for business and service delivery," Kamal Bhattacharya, Director of IBM Research, Africa, said in a press release.
Think less beer delivery drone and more medicine delivery drone. Food is an also option, of course, but the payload is pretty limited. You'd probably need a small fleet to feed a village for any extended amount of time.
Africa does certainly has an infrastructure problem, a problem that's made worse by the fact that Africa's population is growing faster than the infrastructure needed to support it. This is only going to get worse in coming years, which is precisely why the Flying Donkey Challenge was conceived. And, if it all pans out, the participants stand to build some technology that could make life better for some people in Africa. That's a big "if," though.
Cynics will be quick to point out how unlikely it is for these kinds of projects to come to fruition, however. Announcing some ambitious project involving a headline-friendly word like "drones" is one thing, but actually orchestrating all of the moving parts to make it a viable program is another. Take Facebook's plan to provide wireless internet to isolated communities all over Africa, for example. Is it an great project that will conclude with thousands of people in remote regions of Africa surfing Facebook? Or is it just a great marketing maneuver.
The partners involved in the Flying Donkey Challenge including IMB, Africa as well as Swiss WorldCargo, the air freight division of Swiss Airlines. The National Center of Competence in Research (NCCR) Robotics in Switzerland is also helping out. Regardless of intentions, it'll be interesting to see what kinds of innovations these guys help to enable, and it will be great if, in ten years, these flying donkeys are delivering food and medicine to people all over the continent. Again, that's a big "if." [Robohub]

Sunday, 16 February 2014

Forget Amazon, drone delivery will take off in Africa

The 1965 film comedy Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines, centres on a fictional air race between Paris and London in 1910 that offered competitors the chance to become "number one in the air" and win a £10,000 prize.
More than a century later, there is another race to be "number one in the air", but it has nothing to do with British crackpot pilots flying across the English Channel. The new arena for aerial supremacy is Africa, where drone developers are fighting in the skies.
Whether it's tracking poachers, monitoring potential terrorists or patrolling pirate-run waters, governments from Ghana to Ethiopia to Uganda are using drones as an economic alternative to a fully equipped air force
The militarisation of African skies comes with the full backing of the US, which provides advisers and sells drones, but it is another aspect of African life that provides a more uplifting story of how drones are beginning to revolutionise everyday life.
Amazon Testing Drone Delivery Systemdjgabrielpresents
The potential of drones in the West and out of Africa has been defined by Amazon's Jeff Bezos. At the end of 2013 he announced "Amazon Prime Air", a programme that promised deliveries of 2.5kg within 30 minutes if customers were within 10 miles of the Amazon fulfilment centre.
While there is divided opinion about whether Bezos' statement was Amazon's immediate strategy or future-gazing that owed more to PR than reality, in Africa the notion of delivery by drones is being taken very seriously indeed.
The extraordinary acceleration of mobile phone ownership in Africa has transformed the continent. According to a December 2013 report by TA Telecom, mobile phone penetration is now more than 80 percent and means that fixed-line internet infrastructure is unlikely to happen. 
The same is likely to go for transportation. Why build expensive roads to remote rural locations when drones can do the job just as well? The market is there if this can be achieved. In Nigeria, where there is no postal service, ecommerce companies such as Konga and Jumia are undergoing explosive growth in a country of almost 170 million people.
This growth is likely to be further accelerated if these companies, or one that nobody has heard of, can harness drone delivery and become the "Amazon of Africa". The African trade routes of the near-future are almost certainly going to be in the air, not on unreliable roads or routes that have yet to be built.
Jonathan Ledgard is the Director of Future Africa at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology based in Lausanne. As an ex-correspondent of The Economist for nearly 20 years, of which the last ten were in Africa, Ledgard understands Africa.
He cites previous mobile user predictions as evidence of how quickly things move there. Safaricom is one of the biggest operators on the continent and now has more than 17 million subscribers, a number that nobody predicted.
"The most optimistic figures of the Safaricom business model in 2002 were 400,000 users in the next decade and while drone delivery won't solve the question of land rights, food security or water rights, it could have a huge influence.
"Africa's population will double in our working lives and its economy will quadruple in that time and while a $15-20 (£9-12) basic mobile phone is a powerful piece of technology, the future for Africans is robotics. Precision mechanical engineering is not Africa's forte, but there is something about Africa that takes a relatively normal set of mechanisms, then hacks and improves them," he says.
Robotic drone delivery in Africa is likely to be accelerated by this year's Flying Donkey Challenge, an escalating series of sub-challenges held annually in Africa. World-leading roboticists, engineers, regulators, entrepreneurs, logisticians, and designers win substantial grants by advancing the safety, durability, legality, profitability and friendliness of cargo robots.
These sub-challenges will culminate in a race of these "flying donkeys" around Mount Kenya in under 24 hours, delivering and collecting 20 kilo payloads along the way. The winner(s) will collect a multi-million dollar prize and a helping hand up the ladder to ecommerce domination.
"Africa is fast becoming an adopter of cutting-edge technologies to overcome its infrastructure gap. Commercial drone technology has strong potential here to help overcome the limitations of the continent's transportation infrastructure and deliver goods and services in remote or regions -- spurring new models for business and service delivery," explained Kamal Bhattacharya, Director, IBM Research, Africa.
"But for drone technology to meet its potential in Africa, we need thorough understanding of the impact of factors such as weather, terrain, demographics and transportation networks; an area that IBM is researching with its latest cognitive computing systems."
Interestingly, it is not the technology of flying donkey robotics that is demanding, rather getting reliability, expectations and price points right. One way of doing this is by comparing drones with the fleets of motorbikes that serve African health ministries, a strong bellwether for a drone business model.
According to Ledgard at Future Africa, in 2020 the purchase price of a flying donkey will be less than $2,500 (£1,500). Running costs including training, logistics, fuel, spare parts will be under 40 cents per kilometre and able to travel 50,000 kilometres over five years without a major breakdown. This model compares favourably to the number of health ministry motorbikes that are ruined by the state of African roads. 
"Infrastructure is without a doubt one of the greatest challenges facing the continent. Commerce each and every day is held back by poor infrastructure, from roads and rail, to water systems and ICT networks, costing Africa an estimated $40 billion (£24.3 billion) in lost GDP every year," said Angolan philanthropist Álvaro Sobrinho, chairman of UK charity Planet Earth Institute. "No idea should be off the table, delivery drones have the potential to offer a significant boost to African commerce. Delivering and receiving goods in this way could offer a crucial, all year round lifeline to business."
More than a century later, the race to be "number one in the air" will create an ecommerce behemoth and bring many changes to business in Africa. Drones may not be magnificent machines compared to the flying machines at the beginning of last century, but their influence will be felt for the rest of the 21st Century.
http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2014-02/13/africa-drone

FAA Grounds Valentine’s Flower Delivery Drone

COMMERCE TWP. (WWJ) – A Commerce Township floral delivery company says the Federal Aviation Administration has grounded its experiment in delivering flowers by unmanned mini-helicopter.
FlowerDeliveryExpress.com said the FAA has informed them that commercial drone use is only allowed on a pre-authorized, case-by-case basis — and told the company to knock it off.
“Cupid’s wings have been clipped,” said the company’s CEO, Wesley Berry.
But at least the FAA was nice about it, Berry said. “The FAA was extremely professional and polite,” he said. “I couldn’t have been chastised in a nicer way.”
Berry said he agreed with the FAA’s characterization of delivery drones as “flying food processors” and that drone delivery operators probably need regulation — like training to avoid mishaps and insurance should they occur.
FlowerDeliveryExpress.com had intended to deliver as many free rose bouquets as possible to its beta test group on Valentine’s Day to benchmark the delivery capacity of its drone. The company currently uses traditional delivery methods to serve several million other customers across the country.
Berry said the FAA didn’t tell him when they might come up with regulations that would allow drone delivery — but said the FAA told him it is “actively working on it. This technology is here to stay. When the time is right, we’ll be ready for orders to be delivered, not by an address, but by GPS coordinates. It’s exciting to plan the future of the business based on this emerging technology.”
Berry’s other delivery methods in development include trucks carrying pre-made bouquets for rapid delivery.
FlowerDeliveryExpress.com has launched a consumer beta program to test alternative delivery methods and other development efforts. Consumers can sign up for the beta test group athttp://www.FlowerDeliveryExpress.com/beta. Participation is not guaranteed, and you must be a U.S. resident.
The drone flower delivery, which took place Saturday, Feb. 8, 2014 in metro Detroit, can be viewed on YouTube here: http://bit.ly/1lXLQgn.
Berry also owns Wesley Berry Flowers, a Detroit-based brick-and-mortar florist established by his family in 1946. The company has four stores, including one downtown in the Penobscot Building and another in the Schoolcraft-Greenfield area of Detroit. But Berry said that 98 percent of his company’s business is now done via the website.
http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2014/02/13/faa-grounds-valentines-flower-delivery-express-drone/

Dubai's Drone Delivery Idea Might Be Slightly Less Crazy Than Amazon's

Jeff Bezos has some new competition in the crazy drone delivery race. Dubai officials want to start using drones to deliver government documents by next year. And while Amazon's drone delivery program probably won't happen, Dubai's equally-crazy plan might have a slightly better shot at getting off the ground.
The idea is to use quadcopter drones to deliver "small, light value things that are time sensitive, like medicines, identification documents, vital papers and things of that nature," Dr Noah Raford, special adviser to the Office of the Prime Minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, toldThe National. He said the drones could carry a three-pound payload on a delivery of about two miles. Abdulrahman Alserkal, the Emirati engineer who designed the project, says retina and fingerprint scanners would make sure the payload got to the correct recipient.
It's all part of a $1 million contest launched this week, soliciting inventors to find ways to use drones to benefit citizens. And frankly, it might be a little more likely than Amazon's plan. A drone can carry a passport or drivers license across a neighborhood much more easily than that bowling ball you bought from Amazon.
And as Wired's Marcus Wohlsen points out, Dubai's government monarchy runs a lot like a business. UAE Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid doesn't have to grapple with the FAA like Amazon does. If he wants document delivery drones, he's probably likely to get them. Dubai loves drones—in fact, they're already planning to use them to fight fires.
Look, most of the same hurdles facing Amazon will probably hinder Dubai's plan: imprecise navigation, limited payload and range, and the plain old fact that drones buzzing around neighborhoods with no operator in sight are pretty terrifying. Personally, I think it'd be super freaky to get a knock on your door and find a retina-scanning drone there delivering your new car registration papers or whatever. Although that still sounds a hell of a lot better than waiting in line at the DMV. [The National via Wired]
http://gizmodo.com/could-dubais-crazy-plan-to-deliver-official-documents-1523453538