Tag Archive for: Amazon’s

Amazon’s demented plans for its warehouse blimp with drone fleet

Amazon has just gotten a patent for an “airborne fulfillment center utilizing unmanned aerial vehicles for item delivery.” Though the patent was granted in April 2016, the plans for it have just gone public on the US Patent and Trademark Office website. What they describe sounds like something out of a Philip K. Dick novel.

Here’s how it works. First, get a very large airship and float it above a city. Then attach a giant warehouse full of Amazon items to the bottom (actually, you should probably attach this before the floating, but the patent is vague on this point). This warehouse is constantly restocked by smaller airships, which bring personnel and supplies from the ground, as well as carrying away waste. People on the ground use their computers to browse items currently floating over their heads, and order whatever they want. Then drones grab the items, hurl themselves out of the airship, and engage their rotors as they approach the ground. The human receives his or her item from the drone, and the drone ascends back up to its floating palace of boxes and workers.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Technology Lab – Ars Technica

Amazon’s amazingly wasteful packaging

“Why did they come in such a big box,” asks my 14-year-old daughter, Emma, who is hopeful she won’t need them – special dental flossers for kids who wear braces – beyond summer’s end. But she needs them now and none were available at my local grocery or two pharmacies, so, I had resorted to Amazon.

Two days later, a box big enough to hold a DVD player lands on our doorstep carrying two tiny packages of 24 flossers, the pair wrapped tightly together in more Amazon plastic.

070616blog box2

The box measures 15.5 by 13 by 3.5 inches.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Network World Paul McNamara

Amazon’s target not just The Times, but its own employees, past, present and future

If you work at Amazon, leave for any reason, and then have the audacity to publicly criticize the company, you will regret that decision for the rest of your life – especially every time you Google your name — because on the first page of results will be a message from Amazon to prospective employers: Stay away from this one; he or she is not only disloyal, but a liar to boot.

Chilling, no? Yet that is in essence what Amazon senior vice president of hackery Jay Carney (a former White House press secretary) today told all those who have or might someday work for the company, under the guise of rebutting a New York Times expose that was published fully two months ago. Given the infamy of the Times story and incendiary nature of Carney’s response, one can only assume that Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos authorized and approved its contents. If so, the only good sense he showed was in not attaching his name to it.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Network World Paul McNamara

Amazon’s drone ‘win’ will prove fleeting

Late last week the FAA gave Amazon permission to move ahead with its experiments to develop a drone-driven package-delivery system.

Bottom line first: I believe this whole concept is ludicrous – which is an upgrade from my initial reaction: publicity stunt — and that nothing like it will be an important package-delivery mechanism for Amazon or anyone else in our lifetimes. (Everything happens eventually.)

But just to play along, it would appear that the FAA’s biggest stipulations – the experimental drones must be operated by licensed pilots who must maintain line of sight contact with their craft – are deal killers if they prove permanent.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Network World Paul McNamara