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I cut my finger, make can lunch. So I place an order for some Band-Aids a couple minutes ago and now therefore new cuts that is a nearly silent drone system that can deliver a package from the sky right to my backyard in as little as two minutes with dinner plate accuracy. And as far as I'm concerned that's basically teleportation, this is the very near future of package delivery from a company called Zipline. It's been over a decade since we were first promised drone delivery that looked like this.

and to be honest, I was never that stoked about it because I couldn't imagine that anyone would actually want something that big and loud with Judge I have a problem Okay, I'll I only think I don't give a about any positive use of these things I can only think of the negative slash evil because it's not that I'm evil inherently. Okay, so my brain is like hardwired to think like the internet, like like a massively like troll. I keep thinking yeah, what if you okay I'm not dangerously fascinating propellers Landing anywhere near their house. And that was a bummer because with the explosion of people using Amazon or food delivery apps like Doordash or instacart, billions of doorscept deliveries are now happening every year.

But when your lunch only weighs a few ounces, driving it to everyone with these two-ton gas powered vehicles is wildly inefficient. bad for the whole planet, and not to mention just really slow drone delivery if let's incident, if this was war, right? and there's a building with people in it, right? I'm sure that they have always thought about delivering something I like how wolves, right? I mean technology is getting there right. Immediately explained that would be in the scenario. man-child right would not only take a lot of cars off the road, but it would be a lot faster than a car.

It would be fully electric, fully autonomous, and it would cost pennies worth of energy per delivery. and with zipline because the Droid that lowers the package can move laterally in any direction, it can make a dartboard sized Precision Landing even in high winds, while the main drone can stay 400 feet up in the sky, making the whole thing whisper quiet. That's smart, that is very quiet. Oh, in part to the clever design of these really funky propellers.

As you all know, I only make about 10 videos a year and while most are just sort of ridiculous I Like to dedicate one video to Showcase How clever people are using engineering to change the world for the better. And to be clear, the company I'm talking about today is not sponsoring this or paying me in any way. I'm just really impressed by the work that they're doing and how they're doing it. so we'll Circle back in a minute to exactly how they're going to pull off deliveries using these short-range drones in a city.

But it begs the question. If they can make it work there, why not use gliding drones to cover longer distances to deliver critical medical supplies for countries with lots of remote? Villages Well, as it turns out, catapulting life-saving blood through the skies is what they've already been doing for over six years, which is why we need to head out to Rwanda to understand where this all started. And immediately after showing up, we were right in the thick of it as drones were taking off and Landing as another one lands every 90 seconds. you know that's crazy, don't know.
And as a newcomer, it felt a bit chaotic. But if you're gonna rack up 40 million miles worth of drone flights, your team needs to be operating with the efficiency of an F1 pit crew. So here's a crash course on how it all works. It all starts with an order coming in from a doctor at a hospital say for example, for an emergency supply of blood, Then once it's all packed up, it gets passed out to be placed in the belly of the Drone and then the whole thing is placed on the launcher.

At that point, they attach the wings. I mean you can automate all this, followed by the nose cone. Then after some pre-flight safety checks, they launched the Drone all within 90 seconds of the order coming in. The Catapult launcher takes the Drone from zero to 65 miles an hour in a third of a second.

Oh, one day to make a jet and it takes you to Blink And it's a pretty clever design too, because it means the Drone immediately starts at its cruising speed. They need the carriers much less energy to stay airborne. Then once it's in the air cruising at 70 miles per hour, it navigates its way to the hospital and upon arriving, opens the trap door to drop the package, which lands safely using a parachute. Having not completed the mission, it continues making all its own decisions to autonomously navigate back home.

From as far away as 150 miles round trip, you can take an inspiration from an aircraft carrier. As the Drone approaches the military-grade GPS broadcast its position within one centimeter, so these two pools know exactly when to swing up at the last possible moment. Snagging a hook on the tail with the cable which safely slows it down, the crew comes in to remove the battery and wings and it all goes back into rotation. The whole thing is really impressive and incredible, which means it works in pretty much any weather.

And because there's no human Siri, it has no issues flying at night. So they run the operation 24 hours a day, which is out in six years. they've managed to make those half a million often life-saving deliveries. Also, that is the uppermost top of the iceberg tip of how they're doing what they're doing.

But what you should know is six years ago, all the experts told them this was a hopeless cause and failure was a near certainty. and they kind of weren't wrong. Building an engineering product took time. So you prototype you, you know you build it, and then you fail.

and then you try again and you fail and try again until you have the shiny product that you want. This is a different type of aircraft. This is not what we had. The first one used to land on these inflated mattresses.
The vehicle had a hook on the back, you had to tell the tail will deployed like an aircraft carrier. Yeah, and then the fishing pole. Well like I said no, land on the mattress. First of all, he's not saying that figuratively.

they were Scrappy in the early days using actual fishing poles as you can see here. And secondly, this is a duel and what you should know about. Abdul Abdul In Rwanda not far from where these drones are launching and while he would eventually go on to do graduate work and Robotics attending both Stanford and Harvard he got his start in engineering for much more simple means. I Remember that I would make cars from milk boxes that you know was left over.

You know we would add tires there and use it as a car. you guys. Until we saw a video about when they built airplane and helicopters and cars when he lost both of his parents and all three of his siblings in the Rwandan Genocide narrowly escaping himself but he didn't give up on his passion for engineering. You can go around to all the local hospitals I Got a flashback of one of the videos.

Okay, they they try to make a rocket or something like that to go. Um, bro bro. some of the fails are funny because fixing their MRI machines for free using knowledge he gained from watching YouTube videos. Abdul Was the very first zipline employee in Rwanda and he really helped to Pioneer so many of the systems they have in place today that are now used all over the world and so in an effort to test those very systems, I wanted to see if it was robust enough that even a total Dube like me could send out an order.

Oh, we got one. panic. don't worry. Okay, come on.

Sky Good enough. this is where the blood is right. It's O positive I Feel like I shouldn't be touching this. Stay calm.

That's the number one rule. No, he's done. Scan it like this. Five: Okay, you got like a Subway just out here saving lives and once I ring the bell? Oh yeah.

okay. what do I do? Check if there's no tongue and push it here out of my way I'm coming through the wings. how's that better? We're trying to be thick, there's so many. so after a final check of the drone's condition, a little bit of a look to the right.

Oh move. YouTuber Man, let's go dear. Jesus Then we had liftoff. I'm a hero.

We did it. I Just like saved the life basically. wow, how do you guys do this all day long? So now that I had a pretty good feel for the launch site, we headed out to see where some of these drones were actually flying to. So we left the launch site like three and a half hours ago.

We're driving to this remote Hospital on these really windy roads and as we've been driving, we've been tracking and seeing some music playing, drones delivering blood and medical efficiency hospital. So since we're about a half hour out I thought it would be fun to place my own emergency order then it could meet us when we get there because when you need extra ointment, you just need extra. Yeah, these are these things that you think are harder to work on in more like a rural areas like. and then a lot of people want to do it and airspace becomes compromises like it.
I Feel like at Grand scale it starts to fail. but yeah it's good for this though. and sure enough, a few minutes after arriving. I Got a notification for an incoming package.

This is wild because we're like four hours away on some really windy roads and so after opening the package and checking their handiwork I asked if I could speak to a few of the doctors. when's the last time you delivered a baby in few minutes ago? A few minutes ago, that's pretty fresh for the doctors. It was like a miracle with zipline. We are sure that in 15 to 20 minutes we are going to get what they knock somebody out there.

I'm sure that patient will be saved, but it wasn't just the doctor super big on zipline. I Also spoke with a handful of patients who for various different reasons are all alive today because of a zipline delivery every time when I see the drones around I Just think that someone's life is going to be safe. And that's kind of true because their drones have reduced in-hospital maternal mortality by 88. Zipline has two launch sites that give them coverage for pretty much anywhere in Rwanda But they also have operations running in all of these countries.

and while they serve 3 000 hospitals globally today, that number will be ten thousand by the end of the year. All right. So we've covered their long-range country delivery drones. Which means we've now got the context to talk about their short-range City Delivery drones.

But first, I Just have to interject here and say I was blown away by Rwanda as a country I mean right out of the gate. Their stop lights are really cool because they're just countdowns till the light turns green. They can balance and carry pretty much anything on their heads. dude.

Jet I think this show with many people min max the out of Lights Even more than I already do have it in very dense areas where people are gonna it all up. They can balance and carry pretty much anything on their heads. And there's motorcycle taxis everywhere. And given that, win in Rwanda You do as the Rwandans do whenever possible.

That's how we got around ourselves. Everyone was also super friendly everywhere. Yeah, people pre-fire Exactly. They people will pre-fire green lights and people will over fire red light set.

That's another one because if you stop to play soccer with some random kids, oh just know they're not gonna take it easy on you. Yep. besides the fact that Messi seems to like it before traveling there, the only real thing I knew about Rwanda was the Rwanda genocide that took place about 30 years. Well, there are still plenty of Battle Scars As horrific as that was, it sort of galvanized the country into a period of healing and solidarity as a single Rwandan people instead of divisive ethnic groups.
For example, on the last Saturday of the month, literally everyone spends the day picking up trash and volunteering in their local communities. And that's one of the reasons you hardly see litter anywhere. the other one being 15 years ago, they were one of the first countries to ban all single-use Plastics There was just a pervasive optimism in the air. Everyone was moving with the purpose everywhere we went, not just working hard, but working smart with their resources on hand, including their improvised soccer balls.

For over a decade, attending school up to age 16 has been both mandatory and free, and when you combine that with leapfrogging to new technologies like drone delivery. for the last decade, their economy has been growing at 4 times the rate of the U.S economy, while their violent crime rate has been 15 times less than the US. And finally, the most uninducing part of the whole trip was when I hiked to see an entire family of mountain gorillas up close in the wild, which was equal parts adorable and terrible. Scary.

Yeah, mountain gorillas only exist in these two tiny red regions and while there's only a thousand left in the world, I Got to just chill with 20 of them. They're critically endangered, but thanks to Rwandan conservation efforts funded by people paying for brief visits like this, their numbers by 200 over the past decade. All that's to say that besides of course, my own country Rwanda is my new second favorite country. We got this and next time I go back.

I'm bringing a bunch of soccer balls oh yeah, which I will give away to any kid who just promises not to embarrass me. Okay, so now let's talk a little bit more about these new short-range city drones, because for the 4 billion doorstep deliveries that will happen this year in the U.S and that number doesn't even include Amazon By the way, why not at least try and take some of those slow-moving traffic causing to chat, chat. If the drones are allowed to pull up into a package, why why wouldn't you be allowed to have your own drone that pulls up when you see when you see it, the main drone pull up in the sky. You pop your drone Knight and it calculates the trajectory.

And why did they go down to and snatches the package and comes back home? You know I mean yo, what? two-ton gas guzzling cars that's also electric, autonomous, really quiet in zero emissions. and while the solution of dropping down a Droid that could perfectly control its Landing from super high up seeing promising and way better than something like this that had been proposed before when they first told me about it I had two main questions: one how loud and disruptive are they because the last thing we want are annoying drones buzzing by our rooftops all day and two houses that's the last thing we want is for those same annoying drones to start falling down on us from the sky. Also had a bonus third question around how a business is even supposed to load in their items for delivery. and so in a search for answers I went right to their headquarters not that far down the road from where I live and the first thing you notice in the lobby is this really cool projection that not only shows the total number of flights they've flown now at over half million, but it also shows all the long range drones they have in the air at that exact moment delivering those critical Medical supplies all around the world.
And this isn't now just where they design and build all their drones, it's also where they do a lot of their testing and they test pretty much everything in every way possible before getting it out as quickly as possible. And according to their CEO Keller this is something they discovered early on. Our key Insight was we were dumb and we basically always assumed we were dumb and for that reason when we designed things, we got them into the real world. super fast and learned by serving real people.

And you learn so much that you can't learn in a lab or in an ivory. Tower And so before we actually hear just how quiet these things, all the best Engineers I've ever known have had that same level of humility. knowing there's no better way to learn than to test and to break stuff. that's why I Named the Toy Company I started that has the express School of teaching kids to think like Engineers crunch Labs It's because things are supposed to Crunch and to break and to fill along the way.

and so if I could get them to do more than just passively watch a video by building something alongside me while we talk, think about the physics of what's going on, then I know the principles will really sink in. So if you want to have a ton of fun while building up that result. but here's my best attempt. You'll first hear a leaf blower, then a typical hobby drone that weighs one pound, then their drone that weighs 50..

the audio levels completely. I'm watching this all right. Well, that is Whispering that for Terrier John That's very quiet. That cow is way louder than that drone.

I Bet the mic picked up that cow and this test was incredibly surprising to me because I sort of just assumed the weight of a thing would exactly determine how loud the propellers will end up being to keep that thing in the air. But it turns out that's not actually true. even if you just look at nature people. For example, I've actually had like five times before.

My favorite video, look, look at the snow owl. Look at the soundness. It doesn't But with owls, there's an evolutionary pressure to be as quiet as possible. and as a result, their flight sounds like this.
For this reason to crack the code, zipline actually did turn to Nature We study the hummingbird a lot where you have they have the worst case. they're tiny and they're really quiet. They just need to. They just like hover there.

You barely hear this. By the way, that's Keenan He's another Zipline co-founder and for your robotics nerds yeah, which is the open source software used by basically anyone who wants to build anything robot. So whatever. to try and visualize the secret of their quiet propellers.

in this graph, the area under the curve could represent the energy from one of those annoying high-pitched hobby drones. We're the closest of these spikes is the high frequency. That's just sort of grading on your ears. So after studying the hummingbird and designing really wild looking rotors like this, zipline figured out how to take those spikes and flatten them all out.

So while the extra weight means there's still more energy or area under the curve, getting rid of all the spikes means it's much more of a constant whooshing sound, more like white noise that your brain just sort of doesn't rest. Yes, those are high up and inside. Quiet propeller approach for their long-range drones. As you can tell from this doctor with an impeccable taste in YouTube content who just wanted to say you've seen my videos Now you get to be in one.

Have you seen the planes fly over and deliver the supplies here? I Have not yet seen one come and deposit something here that's amazing. There are just 15 deliveries in the last hour. They're really quiet if that is crazy though. I have heard it I Would have you know I'm going to see it for my second question regarding safety.

just like when sending something to Mars all their critical systems have backups on board. In engineering we call this redundancy and they even demonstrated for us how if one propeller stops working, it can still fly due and chart to the large back propeller that picks up the slack. And that back propeller is pretty clever by the way because it's what propels the Drone forward as it moves across town. but then it turns down 90 degrees to help steer and create extra lift.

While it's stationary and dropping down, the Droid parachute is automatically deployed if there is a problem that sensed or if the Drone just loses power altogether. and because of their painstaking engineering efforts, it's worth noting in the six years they've been operating, for those half a million flights, they've had exactly zero incidents caught causing any injury. As for my third bonus question around how drones get loaded up. In the most simple case, something like a grocery store could reserve some parking spots as a loading zone or as one of the zipline.

Engineers told me you can take a window from your local pharmacy and turn it into this portal, then some ASAP items like these would get loaded inside. then it goes back up the Chute enough for delivery for healthcare if you were really sick and say on a 15 minute video call with your doctor. By the time the call was ending, your medications could be on your back porch so you don't have to leave your house. You could also imagine how this could work with a distribution or a large retail store.
More than 90 of people in the US live within 10 miles of a large retail store and zipline drones conveniently can make a 10 mile round trip while carrying up to eight pounds. An additional win for the planet here is you don't need to use all the cardboard to box it up because it doesn't have to survive being shipped out on a big trucks just for big stores. Your favorite local see: this is dystopian. I Think what we live in Manal is the Sopiana.

I Think it's the opposite I think Judith Nah If they swap it up, that's fine. This what we currently have is this opium or restaurant can now more easily afford to send a thing to your door, but in ostensibly much lower cost than a person driving a 3 000 pound car to drop it off. And as soon as by the end of this year, customers such as Sweet Green will start delivering salads straight to your backyard. And not having packages left on front porches is the worst news to hit the ports pirate.

Community Since the invention, all right. So if your mind isn't already blown, let me try one final time by planting a seed for something we might see much further in the future. And to be clear, this is not at all from zipline. It's just an idea that won't leave my head after seeing all this because it stands to reason, if the system can work for packages, it should be able to work for humans, right? In other words, imagine a bigger drone.

Let's say it's an ambulance with more powerful but equally quiet propellers parked so high up in the sky you can hardly see it. Then it lowers the entire cockpit like the Droid which could quietly touch down in your driveway so you hop in or they put you in on the ground. Then it reels you in so you can glide above roads and traffic straight to your destination, only to be dropped off safely in the same manner. All right.

So finally, I Just I Thought that the physics of this ends up being a bit wonky with like Haley's and because if the payload is really heavy right then things sort of act a bit. Definitely right. Like when things start getting in wobbly like like the spinning people? Have you ever seen that before? Just want to wrap up with the coolest part of all of this. By far.

The whole time we were there, kids would be lined up at the fence to watch the drones be launched and captured over and over. In fact, one kid came up specifically wanting to show Abdul what he built completely on his own and in that moment it was impossible not to compare the complexity of this build. This is number one. I'm just saying it.
Things are kind of crazy when you know there's a lot of definitely passed out by now. Holy dude. Uh, they chill out. They're chilling.

They didn't die Dude. there you go slow. That person wasn't seriously injured before now. they are actually relaxable.

They just passed out. Chill to the simple milk carton version Abdul Grew up making because of you have a duel who Bears a scar on his head from the same machete that killed his entire family as a child, not only using his engineering knowledge to save the lives of his people, but more importantly to inspire the next generation of problem solvers to dream even bigger. It's the type of thing that leaves you feeling a little bit of that contagious Rwandan optimism for the future and the incredible potential of us mere humans. Enjoyed it.

Thanks so much! Remember the video very much so that people I know what it's at Bing Bong Bing Bong Yo this is X x on the video I'm going through my voice as well. That has anyone knows that boy I Don't know. He's just so sorry anyone knows that boy I Don't know. he's just so soy.


By xQcOW

15 thoughts on “Amazing invention – this drone will change everything xqc reacts”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars ClanBlade says:

    US military: How do we weaponize this?

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars The end of the world says:

    Drone cameras will 100% be used for surveillance within the next 10-15 years assuming nothing occurs to get in the way of its development and use as seen here. Not to mention you'll prob be noticing the occasional dead bird more often

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars RbxUni says:

    Helicopter

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Like The Color Beige says:

    porch pirate to pilot.

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Miiposhka says:

    WATCH Backyard Squirrelympics 3.0- The Summer Games

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars DesignD says:

    Wow, that mark rober guy should work for Nasa. He is so smart and intelligent and so cool BATCHEST.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sad hawk says:

    my guy stealing content and skipping the ads, no morals andy

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hubris says:

    To whoever took the time to add the segments of xqc talking to sponsorblock, thank you and have a nice day. 😂

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars ben’s channel says:

    Imagine if you were a refugee and you see one of these little shits fly over head at 70mph

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars SunnyXD MC says:

    XQC saying what ifs like he forgot about laws that could be passed

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lil'ducko says:

    Isn't the food delivery robot only solving the problem of delivering food more quietly? It's not a big issue when you are inside your house because of the door and walls

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joe Mama says:

    It's gonna be a shame for the people who live in no fly zones or real close to airports

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars FLYY says:

    black ppl r 13 yr olds named shaqueesha and their moms get railed by white chads black privilege lolol

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars S M H says:

    He should buy crunch lab crates and do it for us

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Schweppes Original says:

    Soy chat OMEGALUL

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