
Google
 is developing airborne drones capable of flying on their own and 
delivering anything from candy to medicine, the Internet company said on
 Thursday.
The
 effort, which Google calls Project Wing, marks the company’s latest 
expansion beyond its Web-based origins and could help Google break into 
lucrative markets such as commerce and package delivery, ratcheting up 
the competition with Amazon.com.
Google,
 the world’s largest Internet search engine, said it will take years of 
development to create a service with multiple vehicles flying multiple 
deliveries per day.
An
 early version of the drone, which Google showcased in a video on its 
website, has a 1.5 meter-(yard-)wide wingspan and is capable of flying 
pre-programmed routes.
“These
 planes have much more in common with the Google self-driving car than 
the remote-controlled airplanes people fly in parks on weekends,” Google
 said on its website, referring to the company’s test fleet of 
automobiles that use sensors and radars to navigate city streets and 
freeways on their own.
The
 drone Google showed in the video Thursday was equipped with rotors to 
allow for vertical takeoff and landing, as well as a fixed wing for 
plane-like flying. The drone flew about 40 meters above the treeline, 
Google said, and dropped a package of chocolate bars to a farmer in 
Queensland, Australia.
Google
 spokesman Ray Gobberg said it was too soon to discuss specific business
 plans for the delivery drones, but the company said on its website that
 self-flying vehicles could offer a cheaper, faster and less wasteful 
way to move goods.
Google rival Amazon.com Inc announced plans last year to use aerial delivery drones for a service called “Prime Air.”
“Local
 delivery of products is the next battlefront,” said Sameet Sinha, an 
analyst with B. Riley & Co. “Google has had its eyes on e-commerce, 
basically trying to get around Amazon.”
Google
 has partnered with local retailers in San Francisco, Los Angeles and 
New York for its Shopping Express service, which allows consumers to 
order goods online and have them delivered to their doorstep on the same
 day.
While
 Google has been quietly developing its aerial drone project since late 
2011, the company will now focus on teaching the vehicles to safely 
navigate around each other, to reduce the noise of the vehicles and to 
refine the delivery capability such that a package can be delivered to a
 spot the size of a doorstep.
Google’s
 Gobberg said the company has briefed the Federal Aviation 
Administration on the project and has been updating the agency. Gobberg 
said Google has done some “small scale research flights” in the United 
States but hoped to talk more with the agency to determine specific 
locations for testing.
In
 2012, Congress required the FAA to establish a road map for the broader
 use of drones. The FAA has allowed limited use of drones in the United 
States for surveillance, law enforcement, atmospheric research and other
 applications.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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