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United States Transportation

Amazon's Prime Air Drones Will Soon Make Deliveries In Texas (engadget.com) 52

Amazon says it will start contacting customers in College Station, Texas, to gauge their interest in receiving orders via Prime Air. Engadget reports: Amazon says it was impressed by many elements of the city, including the research being conducted by Texas A&M University, such as work on drone technology. The US Census Bureau estimates the population of College Station was 120,000 as of last July, so while it isn't the biggest city around, it seems like a decent size for the initially rollout of Prime Air.

"Amazon's new facility presents a tremendous opportunity for College Station to be at the forefront of the development of drone delivery technology," Karl Mooney, the mayor of College Station, said. "We look forward to partnering with Amazon and Texas A&M and are confident that Amazon will be a productive, conscientious, and accountable participant in our community."

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Amazon's Prime Air Drones Will Soon Make Deliveries In Texas

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  • What a lovely idea (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Alworx ( 885008 ) on Saturday July 16, 2022 @06:28AM (#62707664) Homepage

    Having bought a property far from major roads and businesses, I look forward to my hard earned peace and quiet being disrupted by that annoying buzz of drones delivering stuff to my neighbours...

    • by zmollusc ( 763634 ) on Saturday July 16, 2022 @06:42AM (#62707674)

      Buy some noise-cancelling headphones from Amazon. Duh!

    • What I look forward to is spending 15 minutes putting on and another 10 minutes taking off winter clothes to take each delivery for half of the year. It will also be nice to not be able to say "bring it to the back door", "ring the doorbell and wait" and, especially awesome, not getting anything delivered unless I have an app installed on my phone set to record everything I say, do and type.
    • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Saturday July 16, 2022 @10:21AM (#62707882)

      Pharmaceuticals are an ideal low weight high cost item to deliver. I look forward to getting abortion pills delivered in Texas by drones from neighboring states.

    • What are you going to do about your neighbor's tractors, ATVs, or shooting shit in their own backyards? Or the general aviation airstrip a town over. You still live in a place that has neighbors, and you might enjoy some of those things yourself. I can't imagine drone deliveries really being a problem out in the country honestly.

    • They'll be target practice.

  • Why??? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Shangrila12 ( 10092226 ) on Saturday July 16, 2022 @06:42AM (#62707676)
    This would make sense in delivering emergency medicines while avoiding traffic. Bit for every day delivery nobody wants to see a skyful of drones just because Amazon doesn't want to pay humans
  • by cute-boy ( 62961 ) on Saturday July 16, 2022 @06:50AM (#62707682) Journal
    Given the high level of gun ownership in USA won't people just shoot them down then steal the delivery?
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Nah, the he-boy shooter will just send Rover out to pick up the now fallen package..."who's a good dogie, who's a good dogie?!!" Texas dog stands up on hind legs, pulls out a six-shooter, plugs ownwe in ass...."who's a good human, who's a good human?!!". Wife comes out of the house, "who's a good dogie, who's a good dogie?!!".

    • Re:Airway robbery (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Saturday July 16, 2022 @08:05AM (#62707730)

      Given the high level of gun ownership in USA won't people just shoot them down then steal the delivery?

      High level of gun ownership does not equate to high levels of competence in gun use. Most US gun nuts struggle to hit even a stationary target at anything except the closest of ranges never mind a moving target and that's not me talking, that's me quoting several of my American gun-owning friends who put some ambition into being good at using the guns. A whole lot of US gun nuts are also blissfully unaware of the fact that what goes up, must come down and that bullets that miss don't just come to a screeching halt in mid air and drop to the ground, they keep going and hit stuff you weren't aiming at.

      • Hopefully most of them will use shotguns, which are the least dangerous gun to fire into the air, at least if loaded with bird shot. And that seems the logical load for drones.

        Most US gun owners have inadequate range time period. It's not cheap. It's also not even easy to find a rifle range in most places, though handgun ranges are everywhere. And when you do, many if not most private gun ranges require NRA membership, because the NRA provides range insurance to members.

        • Hopefully most of them will use shotguns, which are the least dangerous gun to fire into the air, at least if loaded with bird shot. And that seems the logical load for drones.

          Most US gun owners have inadequate range time period. It's not cheap. It's also not even easy to find a rifle range in most places, though handgun ranges are everywhere. And when you do, many if not most private gun ranges require NRA membership, because the NRA provides range insurance to members.

          I sometimes correspond with a few US based guy enthusiasts who are pretty strict on safety. They tell me that there are some ranges they just don't go to due to these ranges begin full of muppets that seem to be blissfully ignorant of even the basics of gun safety. They prefer the ranges run by an old retired soldier that yells at people for safety violations. As for range insurance, I'm surprised that is not included in your household insurance?!? That begin said, I'm theorising that these drones will prob

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Plus, if you shoot it down the package will come crashing to the ground at terminal velocity. Maybe with a bullet hole in it.

        I expect these things have cameras all over them too.

    • Given the high level of gun ownership in USA...

      This is in Texas so multiply the number by five or six.

      I'm not sure how many of those are shotguns though. Drones will be hard to hit with handguns.

      Birdshot or buckshot? Maybe alternate them when you load.

    • Probably not worth years in jail for some $20 made in china crap.
  • ... will it deliver itself?
  • I repeat: Picture of pipe is not PIPE.
  • by JoeRobe ( 207552 ) on Saturday July 16, 2022 @09:38AM (#62707828) Homepage

    I think it'll be interesting to see what odd issues arise from this.

    What happens if the drone accidentally drops the package?
    If it crashes?
    If it damages property?
    If it is shot down or stolen?
    If it catches glimpses inside someone's house?
    If its battery dies before it makes it back home?
    If it breaks noise ordinances?
    If it hits a power/telecom line?

    These are just a few that pop into my head, that I'm sure Amazon has already been thinking about. But I bet there are a dozen more issues that no one sees coming once this is really operational.

  • by eth1 ( 94901 ) on Saturday July 16, 2022 @10:53AM (#62707924)

    Building an auto-tracking EMP turret in a dog igloo in my back yard to see how many drones I can bag without leaving any evidence whatsoever...

  • So you could get your Christmas present delivered by Owl!

  • Wendover Productions produced a pretty comprehensive documentary on why drone based delivery has not "taken off" - https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
    I wonder which of the reasons mentioned in that documentation have changed recently?
  • Gun-toting Texans being Texans, after all.

    Message to my haters: be sure to keep using up your mod points on my reposts of reposts of reposts, so I run you dry, mmkay? Then you'll all be as toothless as, well, you are, you ridiculous MAGA-hat wearing geezers.
    Also how about we use Ted Cruz and Greg Abbott for target practice? Better use for them than what they're doing now.

God doesn't play dice. -- Albert Einstein

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