Skip to main content

Amazon Delivery Drones Could Soon Understand Humans

Amazon has been awarded a patent that will let its package delivery drones recognize human movement and voice.
The online-shopping giant wants to shave delivery times down to just 30 minutes and plans to take to the sky to achieve it. Awarded on Tuesday (March 20), the patent would allow for drones to identify gestures such as a thumbs-up, frantic waving, shaking fists and a shooing motion.
Filed in July 2016, the patent also identifies voice recognition as a future control input for strangers. Someone who is bothered by a nearby drone would be able to shout for it to leave.
The drones would use a combination of depth, auditory and light sensors along with infrared and visible light cameras. They would also be capable of learning how best to deliver packages based on human interaction.
“In some examples, when in the learning context, a human operator may interact with the UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) in order to ‘teach’ the UAV how to react given certain gestures, circumstances, and the like,” the patent reads.
One of the images attached to the patent shows a man shouting and waving his hands at a drone outside a house. Another picture shows that drones would launch from nearby delivery trucks instead of directly from the factory.
a drawing of a person: Amazon has been awarded a patent that allows its delivery drones to learn and understand human interactions.<br /> © Provided by IBT Media Amazon has been awarded a patent that allows its delivery drones to learn and understand human interactions.
Amazon delivered its first package by drone in December, 2016 under the name Amazon Air. It shipped an Amazon Fire TV and some popcorn to Cambridge, England, in just 13 minutes.
Amazon is no stranger to ambitious ideas. Earlier this year, the company was granted a patent for a smart mirror that could show you how you would look in clothing purchases. Using a combination of cameras and projectors, the mirror can theoretically map your body and let you “try on” the clothes.
At the beginning of 2017, Amazon was even awarded a patent for drone ‘bee-hive' towers that would become the base of completely independent delivery UAVs. Instead of returning to a truck, like in the most recent patent, these drones would operate without human assistance. Amazon describes the tower concept as a “multilevel fulfillment center for unmanned aerial vehicles.” 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Chris Evans is probably done playing Captain America after the fourth 'Avengers' movie

Chris Evans seems to be getting ready to hang up his Captain America shield. The actor, who has played the iconic role since 2011, expressed his intention to step away from the role after the fourth "Avengers" film in an interview with the New York Times . "You want to get off the train before they push you off," he told the publication. Evans will next appear in "Avengers: Infinity War," due in theaters next month. A sequel to that film, which will be the fourth "Avengers" movie, already has a May 2019 release date. Evans has shot the sequel but is set to do reshoots in fall, which could be his last time donning the iconic suit, according to the Times. A representative for Evans did not immediately return CNN's request for comment. In addition to the "Avengers" films, Evans has starred in three Captain America standalone films. The last -- "Captain America: Civil War" -- was released in 2016.

John Cena explains why he's moving past his fear of fatherhood, reconsidering having kids with fiancée Nikki Bella

John Cena is singing a different tune about the prospect of procreation -- a lullaby, if you will! In the past, the wrestler-actor, 40, and his fiancée, NIkki Bella, have made no secret of his lack of interest in becoming a dad. "John doesn't want kids, so we're not going to have kids," Nikki, 34, told TMZ in April 2017. But he's now slowly coming around to the idea, he told Wonderwall.com while promoting his new comedy, "Blockers," in Beverly Hills on March 21. "I'm actually coming more to grips with maybe giving [fatherhood] a try," he tells us, explaining that the shift is due to his growing understanding that it's okay that he might not turn out to be the perfect dad. "It's the realization and the honesty with myself to be like, hey, this is you as a personality -- you're a tough-to-change personality. You may end up doing it wrong," he says. The WWE star admits that when it comes to the prospect of ...

Elon Musk deletes Facebook of SpaceX, Tesla

The verified Facebook pages for SpaceX and Tesla have been eliminated after Elon Musk, the chief executive of both companies, was dared by a Twitter user to delete them. The social media site has been roiled by reports that Facebook user data was exploited by British political consultancy Cambridge Analytica on behalf of President Donald Trump 's 2016 election campaign. The official Facebook pages for Tesla and SpaceX had roughly 2.6 million followers each. #deletefacebook  On Friday morning, Musk replied to a tweet that Brian Acton, a cofounder of WhatsApp, wrote earlier in the week. Acton, who made a fortune when Facebook bought WhatsApp for $16bn in 2014, tweeted the trending "#deletefacebook" hashtag, adding that "it is time". "What's Facebook?" Musk joked. A user then challenged Musk to delete the SpaceX Facebook page. Musk coyly agreed and said he did not know there was such a page. It appears he also ordered the el...