
AMAZON.COM LAND OF MINE AMAZON PRIME HOW TO
An autonomous sidewalk rover would give the company a new method to shepherd packages for cheap.Ĭities, too, have been struggling with how to regulate this new kind of vehicle jamming around sidewalks. Amazon Prime Air, a drone-delivery initiative, has reportedly been in the works since 2013. The company’s Delivery Service Partners incentivizes people to create their own logistics businesses that will work with Amazon. Many of those efforts have focused on the “last mile” from a transportation hub to your home, when parking a car and dispatching a human takes precious time and energy. Scout will also have a human chaperone to make sure the bot can “safely and efficiently navigate around pets, pedestrians, and anything else in their path.”įor years, Amazon has experimented with ways to make its delivery cheaper, faster, and more efficient. For now, Amazon says, it will limit its testing to daylight hours Monday through Friday, when sidewalk traffic is lowest. And soon, your Amazon Prime packages may show up courtesy of Scout, Amazon's new six-wheeled autonomous delivery robot built to withstand the sidewalk.Īmazon announced on Wednesday that it will begin field testing Scout in Snohomish County, Washington, with Prime customers who request same-day, one-day, or two-day delivery.



Robots will lug grocery bags from market to kitchen they’ll begin to replace humans delivering take-out and dropping off parcels. No matter who you ask, the near-future of delivery seems to involve fleets of robots shuffling packages from stores, down sidewalks, and onto doorsteps.
