lara: this week, click takes off with a behind the scenes look at amazon s delivery drone facility. this feels like science fiction a bit. it has that feel. spencer: you ve met the pilot, now meet the copilot - - zoe s got her hands on microsoft s ai driven office assistant. lj sounds out the tech behind noise cancelling headphones. something to play with here. ijust want to pick each thing up and. you can, you can. and we go blackberry picking to check out the new movie chronicling the origins of a legend. you said they were the best engineers in the world! i said they re the best engineers in canada. i for years, we ve talked about how drone deliveries were around the corner. i think one of the main reasons that the idea of drone deliveries is in the public consciousness is because an image went viral quite a long time ago now of an amazon drone delivering a parcel, which kind of suggested to us all that drone deliveries weren t so much over the horizon as they were lit
for years, we ve talked about how drone deliveries were around the corner. i think one of the main reasons that the idea of drone deliveries is in the public consciousness is because an image went viral quite a long time ago now of an amazon drone delivering a parcel, which kind of suggested to us all that drone deliveries weren t so much over the horizon as they were literally around the corner. but when was the last time you had anything dropped off by quadcopter? never - deliveries still come in vans around my way! we re just not there yet for that kind of last mile delivery. there are trade offs between the weight of what can be transported, and battery life. but aside from that, what about the safety? the idea of having all of these spinning blades above our heads, and then they ve got to bring a pizza down to the pavement? now, apparently, last year there were almost 2,500 drone deliveries every day but that was worldwide. so if you think about it in the grand sca
is in the public consciousness is because an image went viral quite a long time ago now of an amazon drone delivering a parcel, which kind of suggested to us all that drone deliveries weren t so much over the horizon as they were literally around the corner. but when was the last time you had anything dropped off by quadcopter? never deliveries still come in vans around my way! we re just not there yet for that kind of last mile delivery. there are trade offs between the weight of what can be transported, and battery life. but aside from that, what about the safety? the idea of having all of these spinning blades above our heads, and then they ve got to bring a pizza down to the pavement? now, apparently, last year there were almost 2,500 drone deliveries every day but that was worldwide. so if you think about it in the grand scale of things, that s.that s not much, is it? and i suspect that most of those would be specialist deliveries in really remote areas. yeah. so
with his goals and he agreed with what they were doing and what they were saying. one final antidote, during this interview we conducted at a terrorist restaurant of a hotel in benghazi, at one point i heard a u.s. surveillance aircraft, a drone buzzing overhead. i pointed up to him, i looked at him and he simply shrug ged, th defiance and the relaxed state he had at that time. the latest word we re getting from benghazi, he apparently is still out on the street. back to you. if they can t find him, they may need to call in your services again to locate him. greg palkot. fascinating look back. thank you. we want to turn now to the terrorist threat that sparked a worldwide alert this week and closed down u.s. embassy is in 22 different countries, yemen emerging as the focus of that feared attack. today, yemen says it disrupted an al qaeda plot to bomb major oil lines and take over the port. a suspected drone strike killed