Morgan3820
Ejection Handle Pulled
Yet another reason not to purchase anything from Walheck
Apparently it's not available in my areaBryan, did you get your drone order yet?
Never? That can't be right. These are already like third or fourth generation of testing. And they don't have to be perfect. They just have to be equally as efficient as human delivery drivers. Already in California, Pizza Hut has stopped delivering pizza because the state has overpriced delivery drivers. Uber Eats, 4-hour Prime delivery, it's only a matter of time before this technology surpasses human efficiency for those gigs, if it hasn't already.The thing about technology is that it never quite works the way you want it to.
I like the way you think.Where’s the sport in that?
Surf casting rod, cast a line with a lead weight so it wraps around the drone down line, then reel that sucker in.
I like the way you think.
That should scare you…
Just hijack it in the neighbor's yard. Preferably wearing a Nixon mask.As for capturing one, they know where they are at all times, probably have cameras in all directions, and are always talking to the cloud. The penalty for aircraft piracy is up to 20 years in prison.
I guess I would phrase it as "borderline useless" idea, rather than "bad".Why is it a bad idea? This can replace limited-area delivery drivers for all manner of products.
Best photoshop I've seen in weeks.hmm..
Google search revealed a 10lb limit.
Hope these have an automatic weight-checking device, cuz if the folks loading them are the same as the cashiers....
View attachment 126869
Yeah, I'm really not liking the chest pounding "jokes" about shooting them, stealing them, etc... Just what we want to do, joke about things to the point that knuckle draggers forget it's a joke and start shooting at aircraft.As for capturing one, they know where they are at all times, probably have cameras in all directions, and are always talking to the cloud. The penalty for aircraft piracy is up to 20 years in prison.
The thing about technology is that it never quite works the way you want it to. Also the never-ending software and hardware issues create a continuous significant effort to manage. Add to this security, vandalism, on-going personnel training, hardware maintenance, and hardware failures, and I don't see this being a long term solution for a company like Walmart. I think the overall logistics will eventually result in an end to this idea.
Some areas where this can be effective is in the medical field and a few others that are part of a closed loop, repeatable system.
They may resolve the current issues at some point in the future, but the industry isn't there yet.
FTFYYeah, I'm really not liking the chest pounding "jokes" about shooting them, stealing them, etc... Just what we want to do, joke about things to the point that knuckle draggers forget it's a joke andstartcontinue shooting at aircraft.
Devils advocate:A solution in search of a problem.
Last year I moved to a location that makes Walmart my only viable in-person option after over a decade of having many, many options in a retail space that was dominated by family owned businesses. Given an opportunity to look at walmart with fresh eyes, I suggest that you sit outside one sometime and count the percentage of people leaving with less than ten pounds of goods. It's a very small percentage. Then subtract from that the ten pounders that wouldn't be eligible for drone service (like me, 14 miles away from the store) and those walmarts that are in protected air space (lots of rural airports are close enough to town for this to be an issue, plus see the video I posted earlier about more congested airspaces).The big stores, Walmart, Target, etc. lost a ton of business to Amazon. “I need this thing but two day delivery is fine, and shipping is free, I’ll just order it.”
They started clawing back some of that business with the DoorDash delivery of items or the curbside pickup options. These stores already have a massive distribution system to get items to their stores, what they are lacking is the last mile from store to home where Amazon was beating them. Now things like this are starting to take business from Amazon.
Completely agree.Last year I moved to a location that makes Walmart my only viable in-person option after over a decade of having many, many options in a retail space that was dominated by family owned businesses. Given an opportunity to look at walmart with fresh eyes, I suggest that you sit outside one sometime and count the percentage of people leaving with less than ten pounds of goods. It's a very small percentage. Then subtract from that the ten pounders that wouldn't be eligible for drone service (like me, 14 miles away from the store) and those walmarts that are in protected air space (lots of rural airports are close enough to town for this to be an issue, plus see the video I posted earlier about more congested airspaces).
And remember that Amazon has, to a first approximation, every product manufactured anywhere on earth in its inventory. Your local walmart carries absolute junk in most categories, and nothing else. Walmart does have food and Amazon has been mostly unsuccessful in competing in this space, but, again, ten pounds.
Prediction: Drones will never be more than a novelty in this space. Expect driverless vehicles (not necessarily cars, expect to be sharing sidewalks) to be the eventual winners.
I'm one of those near-daily Amazon customers. Like Rich, I live 15 miles from a Walmart, and as you said 97% of the stuff I need I can wait a couple days for. I have no loyalty to Amazon, actually I try to order from other places when I have the option, but Amazon is usually where I start and more often than not has the best deal. It gets really old however digging through pages of trash that are actually worse than the selection at Walmart before finding something worth buying. Amazon has gotten far worse in the last couple years in every area.Completely agree.
they aren’t trying to replace your weekly grocery run. They are trying to replace your Amazon order for one thing. And yes, Amazon has everything under the sun but in large urban areas where they do one day / same day delivery they stock a much smaller set of high demand items. That is where these stores are trying to compete.
Nothing is a silver bullet but as part of a larger strategy to regain market share if it gets them a few % they are happy.
My own opinion is that this is a lot of superfluous work for my bag of Doritos. I also don’t pay for DoorDash and probably order one thing from Amazon a month. But there are a lot of people that use both of those services on a daily and weekly basis.
I'm not familiar with any airspace restrictions on them, but they all have waivers for flight beyond VLOS, and as a nobody Part 107 pilot, I obtained a blanket waiver for operations in Class B surface area, so I'm sure they have that as well. While there are certainly places they won't/don't fly (probably x miles from airport, etc.) those areas are likely pretty small and will get smaller as time goes on.Between the weight restrictions and airspace restrictions this just has such limited utility that I'd bet the benefits don't outweigh the costs.
I'm one of those near-daily Amazon customers. Like Rich, I live 15 miles from a Walmart, and as you said 97% of the stuff I need I can wait a couple days for. I have no loyalty to Amazon, actually I try to order from other places when I have the option, but Amazon is usually where I start and more often than not has the best deal. It gets really old however digging through pages of trash that are actually worse than the selection at Walmart before finding something worth buying. Amazon has gotten far worse in the last couple years in every area.
Walmart's biggest problem is that their website is an absolute disaster. It's impossible to tell what they actually have locally. They have "solved" the last mile problem by hiring a bunch of really sketchy looking people to drive to my house in their ****box cars. My wife has ordered a couple things that way and every time they pull in the driveway I'm preparing for a home invasion. Walmart's delivery has actually caused us to never order from them again. Somebody can't do math because the delivery charge is something like three dollars, and I guarantee the gas alone costs more than that. Maybe they're using a "loss-leader" model to try to get some of that Amazon business back? If so they need to at least buy the drivers vests or something so I know what's going on. I suspect the drone system is running on a similar model, and they will eventually have to stop the bleeding. We live in interesting times.
I'm remote enough now that if I want two day, it has to go to my PO box at the post office next to the Walmart. I still find myself choosing that option 90% or more of the time over the Walmart one due to the selection on Amazon.I'm one of those near-daily Amazon customers. Like Rich, I live 15 miles from a Walmart, and as you said 97% of the stuff I need I can wait a couple days for. I have no loyalty to Amazon, actually I try to order from other places when I have the option, but Amazon is usually where I start and more often than not has the best deal.
And the gas alone isn't the cost. I use 50 cents a mile as my planning number to cover gas and wear and tear on the vehicle. I don't count my own time, though delivery services do, of course, have that as a big part of the cost. When we were living mostly in Mexico our US cars didn't get many miles on them, it's been painful to watch the odometer click over at a more respectable US rate lately.Somebody can't do math because the delivery charge is something like three dollars, and I guarantee the gas alone costs more than that.
Ok, that's different from what I understood from past investigations. I guess airspace won't be as big an issue as it looked for a long time when the FAA didn't seem to be making much room for them.I'm not familiar with any airspace restrictions on them, but they all have waivers for flight beyond VLOS, and as a nobody Part 107 pilot, I obtained a blanket waiver for operations in Class B surface area, so I'm sure they have that as well. While there are certainly places they won't/don't fly (probably x miles from airport, etc.) those areas are likely pretty small and will get smaller as time goes on.
Amazing. Had no idea they were doing that over there. Excellent service for remote areas that don’t have a steady supply of blood or medical supplies on hand. Those AED drones being another good idea for hard to reach remote areas.
Is it maybe because you live in an area where Class G is not available? Disclaimer: i have no knowledge about drone regs...Apparently it's not available in my area
They can operate in controlled airspace.Is it maybe because you live in an area where Class G is not available? Disclaimer: i have no knowledge about drone regs...
They can operate in controlled airspace.
Below 400' AGL?I’d be more worried about uncontrolled airspace. How do they maintain visual separation? They’re too tiny to see, and we do have aircraft buzzing around below 1200’.
Below 400' AGL?
Don’t forget helicopters. I could fly 300 ft all day long if I wanted to.Around here there are ultralights, seaplanes, and PPCs at <400'.
Don’t forget helicopters. I could fly 300 ft all day long if I wanted to.
The coverage is free publicity also. That has value that is part of the equation.My bet is that wally world is big enough and has enough money that they can afford to throw away a bit of it on stupid projects once in a while. Very little bottom line impact to them. On the plus side, maybe some part of it will work for some specific use case. And maybe they confuse/distract their competitors with it, too.