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Amazon Begins Using 'Sidewalk Robots' In Seattle Delivery Tests
samedi 26 janvier 2019, 20:34 , par Slashdot
An anonymous reader quotes Fortune:
The future is now: Starting this week, Amazon is testing autonomous package delivery with adorable little robot vehicles in a northern Seattle suburb. Six of the Amazon Scouts, the company announced yesterday, are now delivering packages in Snohomish County in a trial run that complements its existing delivery options... The six-wheeled vehicles are fully electric and will move at 'walking pace,' for the time being only during daylight hours on weekdays while accompanied by Amazon employees for safety's sake.... [C]onsidering the drone delivery Prime Air program never got off the ground, Amazon Scout already seems like a more sensible solution to the last-mile problem: the time-intensive activity of getting packages from distribution centers to homes. Wired points out some particular problems, though: 'A delivery robot can't open gates without hands, and it can't climb steps to get right to your door. And if the robot requires the customer to enter a PIN to get the package out, how can the robot leave the package if you're not home?' And compared to the orderly structure of roads, sidewalks are pure chaos, with people, pets and objects sharing the space. Whether autonomous delivery vehicles are allowed to share the sidewalks varies by state and by city too; San Francisco has severely restricted them since 2017. Amazon's road test in Seattle may determine whether the delivery method finally arrives. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/7RZdlMh7tnw/amazon-begins-using-sidewalk-robots-in-seattle-...
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