Amazon Air Drone
The One and Only latest Amazon Prime Air drone delivery service
Amazon Prime Air explored from drone designs to pigeon dodging.
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If you're a postman, look away now. The
future of deliveries is here - and it's all about drones. It's long been
known that autonomous flying machines are the future – the movies told us
so – but now it's become a reality thanks to Amazon, who, with the aid of one
Jeremy Clarkson, has not only formally detailed plans for its own
drone delivery service, Amazon Prime Air, but started testing it in the UK too.
One of the driving forces behind the
futuristic postie replacements, the online retailer has now offered firm
details on its airborne package providers. Although tests have begun, an exact
date of rollout is still to be confirmed, but the future is edging, very
notably, closer. Here's everything you need to know about the Amazon Prime Air
drone delivery service.
1. It's like a tiny Harrier Jump Jet
© AMAZON
With vertical take-off and landing
skills and horizontal flight, the Amazon Prime Air drones are a
helicopter/airplane hybrid of sorts - much like the Harrier Jump Jet. Topping
an altitude of 100 metres and capable of hitting speeds close to 100kph, the drones
will have to return to base after each delivery for recharging. Designed
as a last resort in the delivery hierarchy - you're not supposed to use
them for every order, just the emergencies - they're likely to be costly
to use.
As well as space saving, there's
another benefit to these vertical moves. Without having to cruise in to
land at low altitude, the drones should be firmly out of reach of pesky kids
stood on the top of their garage with a big stick trying to knock them out of
the air to pilfer their payload.
2. There's going to be a number of
different drone designs
© AMAZON
The Big A has already shown off what a
couple of its air-based delivery devices will look like (they're pretty damn
boxy and bulky for flying machines). These are just the start though.
There are a number of drone types we'll soon see in our skies.
At present there's more than a dozen
different drone designs being worked on by Amazon in the US, UK and Israel.
Each is designed for use in different environments and will have varying ranges
and the ability to carry packages of different sizes. There's no word on weight
limits yet, but think more shoes and games than sets of weights and new TVS.
3. You'll need a helipad in your garden
© AMAZON
OK, not a full-sized,
tarmac circle - that wouldn't be practical - but an
Amazon-branded landing mat. Acting as a homing-beacon of sorts for the drone,
the logo-adorned pad is used to help guide the drone in and acts as a smooth,
safe place for the machine to deposit its payload.
The landing pad is small and
lightweight meaning it can be easily moved to a more spacious location and
stored away when you're not expecting a delivery. Just watch out for your mate
trying to place it on the roof of your car or nail it to the top of your shed,
yeah?
4. Deliveries will be tricky if you
live in a flat or tower block
© AMAZON
As the drones have to make a controlled
landing in a nicely spacious area, city-dwellers and those of you in blocks of
flats are going to have some issues. As well as obstacles such as telephone
wires and narrow streets, the lack of a private landing area could prove
problematic.
Deliver to your mass-inhabited
building, for example, and by the time you get down to the communal
courtyard, chances are a drone-tracking crook will have commandeered your
abandoned package.
5. It will know how to dodge pigeons
© AMAZON
Flying at an altitude up to 400ft
(that's 121 metres or about the height of the Wembley Stadium arch) keeps
these delivery drones well out of the way of aircrafts. It puts them in prime
bird territory though. Fortunately, thanks to integrated cameras and sensors,
the automated flying machines are able to dodge our feathery friends – and
other airborne obstructions.
Sense-and-avoid technologies will
help the drones evade obstacles and obstructions that might cause a
very PR-unfriendly crash - while integrated GPS and sophisticated
navigation tools will put the drone back on track after any unexpected
avoidance manoeuvres.
6. It's going to be quick, very quick
Having to wait 3 to 5 business days for
a delivery is already a thing of the past – thank God. Many firms offer next or
even same-day deliveries and Amazon offers a 1-hour service in a number of
major cities. Impatiently, however, the online retailer is still not happy
with this wait time - and claims Prime Air will make deliveries a near
instantaneous affair.
Within 30 minutes of your order being
placed, your goods could be sat on your lawn or driveway. With the drones
having been shown to clock speeds of up to 60mph – and with little air traffic
to dodge – drone deliveries are not only going to be more convenient, but often
quicker than heading to the shops.
7. There's no more waiting around for a
2-hour delivery window
If you're fed up of waiting for that
particularly vague, and actually unhelpful delivery window ('Your goods
will be with you between 6am and 11pm' - why thank you!), Amazon's drones will
cut out the hassle. Not only will you be notified when you're package takes to
the skies, there'll be a timer counting down the seconds to delivery.
That's not all. If you've urgently had
to nip out – or an unexpected visitor has just parked in your drive/landing
zone – the accompanying Prime Air app lets you postpone delivery at the last
minute. Handy.
8. You're going to need to live close
to a distribution centre
© AMAZON
Undoubtedly impressive, yes. But the
instant saviour to your shopping woes? Not a chance. These drones, just
like your smartphone or wearable, have a performance-restricting flaw - battery
life. A potential problem for the airborne devices, the debut drone features a
15 mile range. That's 7.5 miles there and the same back.
If you live out in the sticks and were
hoping to avoid lengthy trips to the shops, Prime Air might not be your answer.
Not just yet anyway. Inevitably this will improve, but come its introduction,
you're going to have to be in suburbia or miss out.
9. Don't expect any airborne deliveries
anytime soon
Amazon is serious about drone
deliveries. We've known that for a long time and its latest Clarkson-infused
unveil has only further highlighted the serious nature with which the retailer
is pursuing aerial shipping. It's still some way off though.
While the technology might be there,
the regulations aren't. If Amazon's drones are going to fly out of line of
sight (more than 10 miles), regulations need to change first – and this won't
be a speedy process. What's more, Amazon itself has put a damper on those expecting
flying packages come January 1. The firm caveated its big unveil by stating it
"will not launch Prime Air until we are able to demonstrate safe
operations".
10. News for the Amazon Prime
As you all know that the amazon has started testing it in UK. But now it is being delivered to few customer. So as it sounds so crazy the people love to get that kind of service. If test goes perfect then Amazon may start there service in other countries.
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