Newspapers, Delivered by Drone

drone 2Auvergne’s local postal service, La Poste Group, announced on its blog that it is partnering with the drone-maker Parrot to explore the wacky world of high-flying news delivery. The service will be called “Parrot Air Drone Postal,” and it will make use of Parrot’s quadricopter drones. To test its general feasibility, the delivery service is already being, er, piloted in Auvergne, Silicon Alley Insider reports, with a team of 20 postal workers and 20 drones. (The postal workers control the drones by a specialized app — which they can use on iOS or Android devices.)

This may, oui, seem like an April Fool’s joke with a French twist. But the idea itself is no joke at all: Drones are hoped to replace humans in package delivery in places far beyond France. The FAA been studiously streamlining the process for public agencies to safely fly drones in U.S. airspace, with the goal of allowing for “the safe integration” of all kinds of drones — including for commercial purposes — by September 2015. And FedEx founder Fred Smith has been a vocal proponent of the FedEx’s fleet’s conversion to unmanned vehicles, on grounds of cost, efficiency, and safety. The paper boys and girls of France may be some of the first package-deliverers to have their jobs transformed by drones. But they won’t be the last.

Article Appeared @http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2013/03/newspapers-delivered-by-drone/274506/

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