It will take all of this year and
maybe next, but drone delivered food is coming to your house. Tacocoptor was never meant to be
more than a concept, but before the end of 2012, it inspired
Leonardo the Pizzacoptor and the Burrito Bomber, as working
drones that could do food delivery.
In a video posted on YouTube, an engineer sets a location for the
Burrito Bomber to drop its payload and another loads a burrito into
a drop canister with a parachute. Within minutes, the bomber flies
to the GPS-set location and drops the burrito, where a happy
recipient opens the canister and takes a bite.
Drones have been increasingly used by government and military for
many uses, like checking on fishing hatcheries, border surveillance,
specifically directed bombs, search and rescue, and more. Sizes
range from mere inches to larger ones that can fly thousands of
miles at heights of 15,000 feet.
Delivering food by drone is still prohibited by the FAA, but the
recently signed FAA Modernization and Reform Act requires the FAA to
allow drones built by private companies to fly in US airspace, and
could open up a pathway for drone delivery of parcels, mail, and
food. Gives a whole new meaning to home delivery.