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United States Technology

FAA Paves Way For Alphabet Unit To Make First US Drone Deliveries (reuters.com) 48

Alphabet's Wing Aviation unit on Tuesday got the okay to start delivering goods by drone in Virginia later this year, making the sister unit of search engine Google the first company to get U.S. air carrier certification, the Federal Aviation Administration said. From a report: This means Wing can begin a commercial service delivering goods from local businesses to homes, which includes flights beyond visual line of site and over people, the FAA and Wing said. Wing Aviation plans to start commercial package delivery in Blacksburg, Virginia later this year. Wing partnered with the Mid-Atlantic Aviation Partnership and Virginia Tech, as one of the participants in the Transportation Department's Unmanned Aircraft Systems Integration Pilot Program.
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FAA Paves Way For Alphabet Unit To Make First US Drone Deliveries

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  • Now they can squeeze out all the competition. This is great! I love it! Hooray!
    • C'mon folks, this is Big Brother Google we're talking about here! These will be surveillance drones.

  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @02:35PM (#58478804) Homepage Journal

    They killed Kenney!

  • Spy copters (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    It will make deliveries.. and also collect data unrelated to the delivery. That's how the service will compete with competitors. If not this company, then someone else will step up to the plate.

    • (Oh geeze, nobody tell him about Google's streetview or Amazon shopping profiles. )

      But yeah, get ready for "REAL-TIME" streetview available to the highest bidder.

  • by nwaack ( 3482871 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @03:04PM (#58478958)
    These are gonna need to be pretty hefty drones to move these packages around, and they're not gonna be that far off the ground. Heft + proximity = lots of noise = do not want.
    • These are gonna need to be pretty hefty drones to move these packages around

      They will be smaller and quieter than the 4 ton trucks (with squeaky unlubricated roll-up doors) currently used.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      There's that. But also, if I were them, I'd have picked a state with stronger gun laws. Jed might thinks he's shootin' at some food.

  • by cmaurand ( 768570 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @03:42PM (#58479144) Homepage
    I mean, really. What happens when a jet on approach sucks a drone down one of it's engines and crashes?
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Errr....it goes boom?

    • I mean, really. What happens when a jet on approach sucks a drone down one of it's engines and crashes?

      Approach to what, your back yard? I think the FAA is smart enough to write the exemptions (either 333 or COA) so that sensitive airspace like approach corridors are still protected.

    • Google pays a FAA fine for flying out of it's designated area and issues an apology letter to the grieving families.

  • Are these bastards autonomous? Even so, c6gimmer would still claim it was pilot error if anything went wrong.

  • Package thieves will love this, they won't have to risk going to people's doors to steal, they just have to down a drone.
  • I found this video of a pilot project that shows the "drone" in action, along with the expected outrage against it.

    Google Drones Can Already Deliver You Coffee In Australia. [youtube.com]

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