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New Amazon Patent Reveals Details of Possible Drone Delivery Location Verification System

BY Zacc Dukowitz
15 February 2019

An Amazon patent recently published online entitled “Drone Marker and Landing Zone Verification” reveals the system the company might use both for guiding delivery drones to their destination and for verifying that the location where a delivery is made is the correct one.

Amazon-drone-delivery-patent

Image credit: Amazon

The patent was first filed in 2016 but approval for it was apparently not granted to Amazon until just a few weeks back, on February 5th.

The system described in the patent looks like it would be able to recognize landmarks at a package recipient’s address, which could help verify the recipient’s location.

The system could also spot obstacles to the delivery, such as a grill, a basketball, or tree branches (examples taken from an image included in the published patent). Detection of obstacles like these would trigger the system to send a message to the recipient’s mobile device asking him or her to remove the obstacle.

But one lingering question remains: how would the package actually be delivered once the drone is close enough to the recipient’s location to deposit it?

Methods for this step in the delivery process—a crucial step, which has been described by some as one of the biggest technological hurdles yet to be overcome in order to make drone deliveries feasible—include dropping the package with a parachute attached, lowering the package on a tether, or having the drone itself land and set the package down.

Some aspects of completing the package handoff could also include having the drone communicate with the package recipient directly, using the same Alexa-powered speech featured on Amazon’s Echo speaker.

One last thing to note about the new patent is that it describes ways that the drone delivery system could access third party information to verify delivery locations, including architectural information on file with government agencies. A little creepy, but also fairly par for the course in this age of data sharing and disappearing privacy.

Amazon-drone-patent

Image credit: Amazon

Other Amazon Drone Delivery Patents

Amazon already has a bevy of delivery-related patents, including many drone delivery ones.

Just a few weeks back Amazon announced the imminent rollout of package delivery on public buses, thanks to a new patent they’d recently secured.

Using a unique authorization code, Amazon customers in locations where the new service is offered will be able to track their packages using GPS, and pick up their orders while commuting.

According to the patent, this delivery system could prove useful in rural areas where carriers are “rare or prohibitively expensive,” while also helping inject cash into public transportation systems that have been losing customers to private companies like Lyft and Uber.

In addition to the above patent, Amazon has been securing drone delivery patents for years. In 2017 Amazon made headlines for four new drone-related patents, one of which was for a system that could determine the center of gravity of a package.

These patents also covered different designs for drones, including one with a foldable wing, which could prove useful for vertical takeoff and landing in congested urban areas (as depicted below).

Amazon Foldable Wing Drone 2

Image credit: Amazon

Amazon and Drone Deliveries

Back in 2013, Jeff Bezos of Amazon predicted on 60 Minutes that by 2018 his company would be delivering items weighing up to five pounds within a 10-mile radius of an Amazon warehouse.

But of course it’s 2019 now, and that didn’t happen.

As we wrote when reflecting on why drone deliveries didn’t take off in 2018, technological issues related to making packages uniform and pinpointing the precise location of delivery payload stations could be one of the biggest obstacles to making drone deliveries mainstream. (The other two obstacles we wrote about were regulatory challenges and cost.)

Now, with the news of a new Amazon patent for identifying precise locations for drone deliveries and helping guide a drone to that location, it looks like Amazon might be zeroing in on the technology they need to make drone deliveries a reality—but we’re still not holding our breath when it comes to drone deliveries being generally available here in the U.S. any time soon.

What do you think—is Amazon’s new patent indication of progress on the technological front, or do we still have a long way to go in developing the technology needed to make drone deliveries a reality? Share your thoughts on this thread in the UAV Coach community forum.

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