Interesting to say the least.
I'm afraid that's going to be bittersweet at best. I can't see it working without severe restrictions to airspace. The FAA is not going to chance a midair over a populated area.Looking forward to UPS using the drones now that they got approval, I think it going to really help with taking the stigma out of drones overall to the masses.
There is already the risk of a mid-air over populated areas, just from current operations.I'm afraid that's going to be bittersweet at best. I can't see it working without severe restrictions to airspace. The FAA is not going to chance a midair over a populated area.
I watch a light/Dron carnaval with over 100 drones operated by computer. Is a matter of good quality GPS and software onlyThere is already the risk of a mid-air over populated areas, just from current operations.
If the FAA looks quantitatively at the trivial added risk from drone operations, they might do the right thing.
TCS
Yes. They finally realized the error of their ways.I believe Amazon and some of the other big biz boys pulled the plug on further development of aerial deliveries?...
I’d speculate that delivery companies will be successful in procuring waivers or more likely COAs that allow them to launch a dozen drones under AI control, monitored by an operator in the truck. Drones deliver, return, then drive the truck to the next neighborhood.…With a limited range on the drones, I don't see how they are to use this effectively unless they deliver packages in the limited range and the trucks deliver beyond the range or they deliver from the trucks. If the latter, the driver would also have to be a certified drone operator.
That sounds like a feasible possibility. I wonder what rule changes will happen w/delivery drones. We now have to 'make way for manned aircraft' - What's it going to be when the deliveries start coming?I’d speculate that delivery companies will be successful in procuring waivers or more likely COAs that allow them to launch a dozen drones under AI control, monitored by an operator in the truck. Drones deliver, return, then drive the truck to the next neighborhood.
It could be a driver *and* an operator in the truck, with the driver hand-delivering to the addresses not yet in the aerial access system.
At enterprise scale certification of driver/operators would seem a fairly trivial task.
I would just say, "be careful what you wish for." Having the FAA get more involved in droning will give them more reason to hire more people who need the work needed to create the additional/modified/new rules/restrictions/requirements/limitations....ad nauseam....Looking forward to UPS using the drones now that they got approval, I think it going to really help with taking the stigma out of drones overall to the masses.
Phantomrain.org
Gear to fly in the Rain.
Hi there!RE:UPS - perhaps the trucks will drive to a neighborhood, and then the driver will become a drone operator for the "last mile" of the delivery. Of course that presumes a great deal of training, since delivery drivers may or may not make good drone operators...
Interesting concept. Last mile delivery service. May be quicker to just keep the truck going for the last mile. By the time the delivery person stops, sets up whatever aircraft and package needs to be sent off, the other mile would have been accomplished.Hi there!
"Last mile" drone delivery operations are absolutely on the way to being incorporated into cities. We've recently attended several conferences where government officials have spoken on the inevitability of an aerial ecosystem that features drone delivery. The FAA has also published some information outlining the steps they're taking to make drone delivery a reality.
I work with Zing Drone Delivery - we provide an end-to-end drone delivery platform with autonomous software and plug-and-play hardware for the most common consumer drones. Check us out on instagram @ZingHQ
We're definitely looking forward to the future of drone delivery!
Exactly this. I buy a LOT of stuff from Amazon (via Prime) because I live in a semi-rural area and don't want to bother with going into town every time I want something. The percentage of items I buy that could be carried by any reasonably sized drone is very, very small.There may be some isolated applications for package delivery but I see no realistic way it can be done on a large scale approaching the scale of UPS, Amazon, etc. In my mind drones are more eyes than arms and legs.
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