In Australia, a drone will deliver – books? Yes, really

The drone will be used to rush textbooks to students in delivery times as short as two to three minutes.

An unmanned US Predator drone flies over Kandahar Air Field in southern Afghanistan.

Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP

October 18, 2013

Now this is one drone we can get behind.

Australia is set to launch the world’s first book drone, an unmanned aerial drone that would be used to deliver textbook orders to students.

According to Australia’s The Age, Textbook rental service company Zookal has partnered with University of Sydney tech start-up Flirtey to fly rental textbooks directly to users within minutes.

Here’s how it works: Students would order books from rental company Zookal via a smartphone app and one of six unmanned Flirtey drones would immediately deliver the books to students’ doors. Students would be able to track the drones’ progress in real time on a Google map.

The venture is still pending approval from Australia’s Civil Aviation Safety Authority and its backers hope to launch the service in March 2014. 

Flirtey plans to use laser range finders and sonar technology to help guide drones and avoid collisions with buildings, birds, and pedestrians – common problems in past drone experiments. 

According to The Age, a special delivery mechanism “allows for textbooks to be safely lowered to the customer without the drone having to leave its hovering height of about three metres. If gentle force is applied to the drone's lowering cord, the parcel is released.”

From what we can surmise, this venture has more than just novelty going for it. The drones, which can carry up to 4 and a 1/2 lbs, can reduce waiting times to as little as two to three minutes, according to Zookal, and reduce delivery costs dramatically. Same day postal delivery in Australia can cost as much as $29.95, while Flirtey deliveries will cost $2.99.

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Drone usage for civilian and commercial purposes is set to explode in coming years. It’s already been utilized by fire departments for surveying emergency situations, by animal rights activists to monitor abuse, by news agencies to obtain footage, and even to target mosquitoes in Florida.

Food companies have climbed aboard, too. Domino’s Pizza ran a test flight of its “DomiCopter” in June in Britain, and Tacocopter has proposed using drones to deliver tacos in San Francisco.

There are humanitarian uses, as well – Flirtey sees potential in using drones to deliver life vests on beaches and to transport life-saving materials to hospitals.

We’re eager to see drones move away from the battlefield and toward new, peaceful fronts – civilian, humanitarian, and yes, literary.

Husna Haq is a Monitor correspondent.