Desperately need a textbook? This Australian drone is coming to this rescue!via PandoDaily
That Amazon is readying a fleet
of drones to drop off packages to customers seems like yet another
example of the company’s cutting edge. The project could go live as
early as 2015, after the US approves laws for commercial use of unmanned
aerial vehicles (UAVs), but a slew of companies around the world are
already leaps ahead of Amazon.
Australian startup Flirtey is in the
unmanned aerial-vehicle business, and it's partnered with a company
called Zookal to effectively create the Amazon.com of textbooks that delivers by way of drone instead of UPS.

Australian authorities were among the first in the world to deem commercial-drone usage legal, so Flirtey got to work finding ways to apply the technology. By partnering with textbook company Zookal, Flirtey will use its drones to deliver Zookal customers' orders directly to them.
It previously cost Zookal an average $8.60 in shipping costs to fill an order. Now that drones will be handling delivery, however, that average shipping cost drops to an estimated $0.80 per order.
Here's how TechCrunch's Catherine Shu described it:
"Zookal will use Flirtey to send
parcels for free and claims deliveries can be made in as little as two
or three minutes, compared to two or three days for traditional shipping
methods. Upon arrival at an outdoor delivery destination, Flirtey’s
drones hover and lower the parcel through a custom delivery mechanism
that is attached to a retractable cord. Real-time GPS tracking of each
drone’s location will be available through the Flirtey app for
smartphones."
Intrigued? Check out this video with the founders to learn more.

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