A drone has successfully delivered a package to a residential location in a small Nevada town in what its maker and the governor of the state said Friday was the first fully autonomous urban drone delivery in the U.S.
Flirtey CEO Matt Sweeney said the six-rotor drone flew about a half-mile along a pre-programmed delivery route on March 10 and lowered the package outside a vacant residence in an uninhabited area of Hawthorne, southeast of Reno.
The route was established using GPS. A pilot and visual observers were on standby during the flight but weren’t needed, Sweeney said.
He said the package included bottled water, food and a first-aid kit.
“Conducting the first drone delivery in an urban setting is a major achievement, taking us closer to the day that drones make regular deliveries to your front doorstep,” Sweeney said.
Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval congratulated the company “on successfully completing the nation’s first fully autonomous urban package delivery.”
“I am thrilled that Flirtey is not only testing its cutting-edge technology in Nevada, but also creating jobs through its headquarters relocation to Reno,” Sandoval said in a statement.
NASA is working with the drone industry and the Federal Aviation Administration on a low-altitude air traffic control system to prevent crashes involving drones and other low-altitude aircraft.
Flirtey conducted the first FAA-approved, rural drone delivery in July to a rural health care clinic in Virginia.
The Nevada delivery demonstrates that advanced drone systems allow aerial vehicles to safely navigate around buildings and deliver packages with precision within a populated area, Sweeney said.
The company recently moved its headquarters from Australia to Nevada. It said the recent delivery was filmed for an upcoming ABC-TV documentary.
Hawthorne, a town of about 3,000 residents, is the home of the Hawthorne Army Depot.
Flirtey has been conducting research and development through a partnership with the Nevada Advanced Autonomous Systems Innovation Center at the University of Nevada, Reno. Nevada is one of six states the FAA has designated as unmanned aircraft systems test sites.
“This was by far one of the most successful (unmanned aircraft systems) operations we ran and represents an advanced level of test and development … by Flirtey,” said Chris Walach, director of operations for the FAA-designated Nevada site.
The Associated Press contributed to this article.
Automation and technology are eliminating millions of jobs. In the early 2000s I worked picking orders at a food distribution warehouse that employed about 300 workers. Now that same warehouse employs about 60. Automated pallet-jacks and other fancy machines have gotten rid of 250 workers. Now the UPS and Fed Ex delivery drivers face a similar threat. Oops, I forgot the Postal Workers. Automation doesn’t only kill blue-collar jobs. Computer programs and websites are eliminating white-collar jobs. Where is everyone going to work in a few years?!!
Sooner or later, we need to test the consequences of mid-air collisions, between drones and heavy aircraft.
Not sure exactly how to do this; I suspect that these would not tend to result in catastrophe.
I see ulterior motives behind this drone crap…There are a lot of things this country needs besides drones.
I do not trust oBUMa and his little jokes about drones and his ” we won’t see them coming ” remark.
Rose-
i’m with you there; i see this as a semi-transparent PR campaign to convince Idiot Americans that “drones are nice, they’re friendly, they deliver your packages,” while simultaneously spying on all of us, even targeting “enemies of the State” should D’OweBama wish it…or even his personal enemies, for that matter. If there have not yet been murders committed by drones in America, there will be, relatively soon, too.