The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Amazon wants to deliver — right to your car

Company is working on a feature to put packages directly into your vehicle

- By Rex Crum

Remember those halcyon days of six months ago when Amazon introduced a groundbrea­king idea for its Prime customers called Amazon Key, a new feature which lets a delivery courier use the cloud to unlock your front door and put your packages inside your house?

Well, on Tuesday Amazon said it will take that concept another step further, by unlocking and making deliveries to your car.

The new feature, which is available for its Prime members in 37 U.S. cities, uses the connected technologi­es that are being built into more cars these days. Amazon said Tuesday it has lined up General Motors and Volvo as the initial automotive partners to incorporat­e the delivery technology with their vehicles.

The way it works: Say you’re running out of diapers at home, but you don’t feel like stopping at Target on the way home. You can use the Amazon Key app to arrange for Amazon to come to you car, unlock it electronic­ally, put that box of Pampers in your trunk, lock the car up, and get a notificati­on that the delivery was completed.

Amazon has been testing the service for the last six months in San Francisco and Washington state. The company has a tool where people can plug in their ZIP codes and vehicle model to see whether the service is available in their area.

There are a few caveats to the service. For now, it’s available only on select GM and Volvo automobile­s made since 2015.

A delivery has to be made within a certain radius of an address Amazon has used for deliveries.

To locate your car, the Amazon couriers will use the vehicle’s GPS location, license plate number and an image of the car in order to ensure they are making their delivery to the right vehicle.

 ?? Associated Press file ?? GM says more than 7 million owners of Chevrolet, Buick, GMC and Cadillac vehicles are eligible for Amazon’s new Amazon Key In-car delivery service.
Associated Press file GM says more than 7 million owners of Chevrolet, Buick, GMC and Cadillac vehicles are eligible for Amazon’s new Amazon Key In-car delivery service.

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