Drones at your doorstep: is Amazon claim just hot air?
Two
big pieces of news dominated the consumer and technology airspace all of last
week. One was the often-repeated and rumoured-for-many-years news that ‘Amazon
was about to release its own smartphones’. The other was the more
front-page-headline-making ‘Amazon to air deliver your items in less than 30
minutes by flying them to your house in a drone’! Both are game changers if they
happen – the first will hit like a sledgehammer into other smartphone
manufacturers’ sales; the other is just so outlandish and yet so deliciously
exciting as a concept that people are setting up mini landing pads on their
roofs to be the first to get a Prime Air delivery. Let’s get a reality check on
both.
Reasons why Amazon smartphones will
happen
The first rumours about Amazon coming up with two or three different smartphone models surfaced right after they came out with their tablets. Thus it’s been quite a while and every year predictions with new dates, new features and new pricing models are revealed, and here we are, almost three years later, with no Amazon smartphones. But make no mistake, they will come and that too very soon. Here are three reasons why no power on Earth can keep Amazon smartphones from making a very dramatic entry.
The first rumours about Amazon coming up with two or three different smartphone models surfaced right after they came out with their tablets. Thus it’s been quite a while and every year predictions with new dates, new features and new pricing models are revealed, and here we are, almost three years later, with no Amazon smartphones. But make no mistake, they will come and that too very soon. Here are three reasons why no power on Earth can keep Amazon smartphones from making a very dramatic entry.
Amazon has tasted amazing success
with their Kindle Fire tablets and is the second largest selling tablet in the
world after the iPad. Thus, they already have a consumer base as well as high
consumer acceptance for their devices. A smartphone is therefore, a no brainer.
The idea for Amazon to get into this
space was to have devices that are locked into the Amazon media ecospace. Thus
books, movies, songs and the entire Amazon shopping network in your pocket is
the best way for Amazon to continue to be the world’s largest online retailer.
They own you on your tablet, smartphones sell much more than tablets, do the
math!
Amazon is extremely aggressive in
pushing the envelope in terms of features, specifications, hardware and most
importantly price. A high-end, top-specced, super flagship smartphone from
Amazon can be sold at rock-bottom prices, (some rumours say that it’ll be given
away free. That is utter nonsense and just not Amazon’s business model) thus
bringing in great numbers in sales and also becoming a huge catalyst in
fuelling even bigger sales of all things from the Amazon marketplace. They know
this business well, so why wouldn’t they do it with smartphones, the world’s
largest selling consumer device?
So get ready and start saving some
money (not to buy the phones, as those will be very well-priced – save money
for all the shopping you’re going to do off those phones) as at least two
Amazon smartphones are just around the corner.
Reasons why Amazon Drones won’t
happen
Sorry to break that awesome image
you were conjuring up in your mind of you placing an order, a drone picking it
up from an Amazon warehouse, flying across the city and dropping it at your
doorway – all in 30 minutes or less. It’s great science fiction and it will
remain just that – fiction! It won’t happen now or even in the next 10 years.
Here are three reasons why this is just hot air of epic PR proportions!
Let’s be very clear, it’s not technology
playing the spoilsport here. The capability to do this isn’t very far away. The
drones exist, mapping is getting better every day and in another year or two,
anti-collision technology to make sure that the drones don’t bump into each
other or tall poles or electricity wiring and/or other cityscape hurdles.
The first problem here is purely
logistical. Amazon has almost all warehouses built far away from cities (it’s
the only way to have huge warehouses).
Drones, even with fantastic new
technology can’t do more than about 15 to 20 kilometres flying (both ways).
Thus that would mean creating smaller Amazon Droneports inside cities, which
destroys the entire business model that Amazon has painstakingly built over
many years.
The second problem is money or more
specifically, making sure that these awesome drones make some money for Amazon.
This isn’t going to be a venture for charity or a higher purpose, this is a
commercial project that must make sense financially. These drones can only
deliver small and light products, are expensive to buy, run and maintain, the
entire infrastructure around these drones from sorting to pickup to delivery
will have to be built from scratch and that will be exorbitantly expensive, and
each delivery yet must make a profit. As of now, it won’t!
The third big barrier to overcome is
of course our old friends – regulations, licensing and liabilities. Drone
technology must be licenced by each country and sometimes by each city and
zone. As of now it’s a big no all across the world for consumer level drone
usage (yes, it’s legal to drone bomb your house with you in it, but it’s not
legal to drone deliver your toothpaste to you in your house). Even if the
regulations will come into play one day, the liability of injury are a huge issue.
The first drone to lop off your pet dog’s head or injure a curious child will
send the entire drone delivery business crash landing into billion-dollar
liability suits. I don’t see Amazon willing to take such a huge financial risk
just to make sure you get your stuff in 30 minutes.
There you have it. Two big pieces of
news from the same company – all in the space of one week. Running a reality
check on both seems to have separated the wheat from the chaff. Smartphones are
in; drone deliveries are out! One out of two isn’t that bad!
Rajiv Makhni is managing editor, Technology, NDTV, and the anchor of Gadget Guru, Cell Guru and Newsnet 3. HTBR 131208
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