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UPS Is Starting To Test Drone Deliveries In the US (qz.com) 44

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Quartz: UPS announced Sept. 23 that it has begun testing drone deliveries in the U.S. with drone manufacturer CyPhy Works. The two companies yesterday completed a test of delivering medicine from the coastal town of Beverly, Massachusetts, to Children's Island, a small island about three miles into the Atlantic Ocean. CyPhy's drone has night-vision capabilities, according to a release shared with Quartz. The test yesterday involved a trial situation where an asthmatic child urgently needed an inhaler, which was dispatched from the mainland to the island, arriving far more quickly than it would've taken a boat to get there. CyPhy's drone autonomously flew supplies over the ocean to a group waiting to receive them on the other end, although there was no actual child with asthma in danger. In May, UPS had announced that it was partnering with the drone company Zipline to deliver medical supplies to rural Rwanda, having invested nearly $1 million into the company. UPS has also invested an undisclosed amount in CyPhy. UPS told Quartz that the FAA was aware of its test, and Houston Mills, a commercial pilot with UPS for over a decade and the company's director of airline safety, was recently announced as a member of the FAA's Drone Advisory Committee. The committee is working with industry experts and companies to figure out how to safely integrate a network of commercial drones into U.S. airspace. You can watch the heroic footage of the trial run here.

Comment Re:From stuff I've seen... (Score 0) 329

Hehe, that is my real world experience as well. This highlights one of my favorite parts of open source. Because each line of code is "reviewed" by potentially thousands of people who are actually interested in the code for themselves as much as for the community (instead of one or a few coders that really don't want to give the man their full brilliance and really just want to go home and watch TV :-D), open source tends to create cathedrals of brilliant code. Sourceforge (particularly large known projects, small ones can be very sketchy) is a great source for good code.

Of course I am a curmudgeonly old open source advocate, so I may be a bit biased. ;-p

Comment Trust Microsoft (Score 0) 375

But...with such a long and varied history of monopoly power, deception and downright dirty tricks, why would anyone trust Microsoft again when there are so many good free alternatives that have open communities and standards. Don't these guys get it? Focus on the XBox. There is still a market for a closed (and even evil) system here.

(Granted, I am a grizzled old Unix advocate that would have said this 20 years ago as well. :-D)

Comment Re:Isn't MS becoming irrelevant? (Score 0) 433

Uh, isn't Ubuntu technically Linux? I do agree that Linux was for pros in years gone by, so you had to be extremely proficient (i.e. be able to google and understand) to use it. I do believe that many people over-emphasized the problems though. MS did package things up nicely and get things to work well (through constant bullying and monopoly powers). But like you pointed out now there is Ubuntu. My point is not is MS viable, because it clearly is. It is whether it is relevant or not. With the exception of games, I do not use or need MS for anything (and quite honestly couldn't bear using without Cygwin). And as for the games, that is primarily due to MS's monopoly bullying. I used to be one of those Linux heads that was like, "OMG, when will MS die." But now I am more like, "can I shell into Unix? OK, works for me." It is the relevancy of MS that I am talking about.

Comment Isn't MS becoming irrelevant? (Score -1) 433

Isn't MS pretty much irrelevant now anyway. They can't really compete in large computer clusters (you can find some cases, but it is due to marketing FUD and leads to a severely crippled system typically), and it look like they aren't even trying to compete in the small personal computing device market: smart phones, pads, etc... How it still has it's strangle hold on the PC market, I can't comprehend (except that there really is something to marketing, isn't there). I do use MS in some cases, but the OS is irrelevant at this point. I refuse to use software that is not open source (except games. Damn you MS and your evil business practices. But there should be a solution for that at some point. Qt, OpenGL and Wine already does a decent job to bridge this gap). Cygwin makes MS bearable IMO (WTH would I do without a bash shell and perl). I think MS needs to focus on the XBox where they have a good chance to use monopoly powers to control the market.

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