Is Drone Delivery Finally Ready for Takeoff?

Published 2023-10-31
Tech companies from Google to Amazon have for years promised a future filled with packages falling safely from the sky. A startup called Zipline might be the first to make that future a widespread reality.

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All Comments (21)
  • @bahroum69
    So many question were not asked. How is that scalable to millions of packages per day? Does this mean they will need to have millions of drones? What about noise? What are their current numbers? Does this have any hope of being profitable someday? What about turnover time? Infrasctructure needed for each plane etc. This sounds like a pipe dream. Edit: all was answered watching mark rober's video on zipline. What those guys are doing is absolutely phenomenal.
  • @user-fr3hy9uh6y
    Moving from a high dollar, extremely rural market to a low dollar urban market is hard. How many drone flights would be needed to deliver the packages in a single UPS truck, and how many ups trucks are on the road at one time. How much would you be willing to pay, $10-$50-$100, to get your coffee delivered in the morning? Makes sense when it would take over a day to deliver time critical packages, not when it would take 15 minutes by car.
  • @prakash_77
    Looks fantastic. Very well done video!
  • There's a specific reason why flying aircraft is heavily regulated around the world: it's very dangerous to fly a heavier than air apparatus over cities. smh.
  • @wda_digital
    Amazing. I watched a video about them about 2 years ago and they are doing a great job.
  • @miguel_codes
    Great video. I still feel like there was a missed opportunity to highlight the success of the Rwandan founder that started it years ago.
  • @glennalexon1530
    Poor people around the world will be delighted by having Zipline deliver everything they order online. Think of all the lives they're going to save!
  • @_hadoken
    What happens when I try and hold onto the line as the drone retracts the cable?
  • @kalebmanning4425
    Duck season may only be a few months but it’s about to be drone season year round.
  • @Siamect
    It's still Reynolds number that dictates the lack of efficiency of small aircraft. What works well in Rwanda where you don't have any other way of quick delivery don't work for delivery to households.
  • @r3dp1ll
    Guy was playing with her :)
  • @mattalford3932
    I can see this working in rural areas, but not cities. We didn't design our cities and towns with drone deliveries or self driving cars in mind.
  • @mattalford3932
    Im not giving up my flying drones because some corporation wants to reduce employee size.
  • @7_of_9
    Technically They are landing drones the same way I landed F16 at the Navy