The Star Malaysia - Star2

Amazon looks at dropping packages onto your patio from as high as 7m

- By ETHAN BARON

IT’S NOT that drones get tired, it’s just that if they’re delivering your box of cat food and low-rise socks, dropping down to put it on your patio and flying back up for the next delivery takes power that they need to conserve.

Better to just hover over your home and drop the box, a new patent from Amazon proposes.

And no need to cover your head: the Seattle e-commerce giant has that – and the delivery box full of your precious items – covered, at least in theory.

Amazon on March 12 received a patent for cushioning packages with inflatable airbags, so they can be dropped from as high as 7.5m.

The drone could inflate the “airlift package protection airbag” with a gas canister or even just from the downdraft from the aircraft’s propellers, while in transit or “near a drop location, such as a backyard or patio of a residentia­l dwelling,” the patent said.

This patent, like at least two others Amazon has received, also envisions the possibilit­y of catastroph­ic midair failure. The airbag for the package could be inflated automatica­lly if a drone – also known as an unmanned-aerial vehicle or UAV, “becomes unresponsi­ve to controls and/or loses some or all power” if the drone “contacts an object, a building, and/or the ground”.

Should you be, say, barbecuing on your patio when your delivery drone appears, there’s no reason to fear, but if you want your package, you’ll need to get out of the way – and take your bottles of beer with you – so it can fall from the sky. The drone could use cameras and other sensors to make sure the “drop zone” is empty of people, animals and “fragile objects”, and decline to make the delivery till all is clear, according to the patent.

A drone could even be constructe­d in such a way that it could let loose a package that would travel “partially horizontal­ly”, to land on “an elevated balcony of a tall building”.

The airbag Amazon envisions would deflate slightly upon impact with the ground to cushion the landing and protect a package’s contents.

Energy consumptio­n is an important considerat­ion for drones, which “may conserve energy if they minimise changes in altitude”, the patent says in explaining why dropping packages from the sky makes sense.

Height range for the release of packages from a drone would range from 1.5m to 7.5m, “depending on the size and weight of the package”.

Amazon, keenly focused on automation and cheap, efficient product delivery, has obtained dozens of drone-related patents in recent years, but it remains to be seen whether this latest one, or any of the others, will lead to technology used in drone deliveries.

 ??  ?? An overwhelmi­ng number of Facebook users did not realise they had given their consent to all of the clauses in the social network’s terms and conditions. — dpa
An overwhelmi­ng number of Facebook users did not realise they had given their consent to all of the clauses in the social network’s terms and conditions. — dpa
 ??  ?? A new patent from Amazon proposes a system where drones drop packages to consumers from as high as 7.5m in a bid to conserve energy. —Dreamstime/ TNS
A new patent from Amazon proposes a system where drones drop packages to consumers from as high as 7.5m in a bid to conserve energy. —Dreamstime/ TNS

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