In a satirical YouTube video, the on-demand DVD video service announces that a "fleet of high-tech drones will deliver your disk to you within mere seconds of you adding it to your queue." February 25, 2014 7:17 PM PST Netflix's spoof DVD delivery drone. (Credit: Screengrab by Dara Kerr/CNET) What would be the fastest way to get DVD rentals to materialize in users' hands the moment they added them to their queue? The US Postal Service? No. Bike messenger? No. Delivery drones? Just maybe... With a tongue-in-cheek YouTube video, Netflix takes a friendly jab at its competitor Amazon and its announcement last year that it was working on delivery drones. The parody video broadcasts the roll out of a "groundbreaking" new feature called "Drone 2 Home." "Now we are getting back to our creative roots with our groundbreaking, same-day, home delivery subscription service: Drone 2 Home," Netflix's DVD Division general manager Hank Breeggemann says in the video. The video shows a white, shoe-box sized, four-propeller drone carrying a red Netflix DVD envelope to people's doorsteps, across the San Francisco Bay, in front of St. Louis' Gateway Arch, and even into a public restroom. "That's right, our fleet of high-tech drones will deliver your disk to you within mere seconds of you adding it to your queue," the video announces. "We have literally spent days working out most of the bugs. By enabling location services on your smartphone, the disk can come right to you wherever you may be." Related stories Rolls Royce said to be developing drone cargo ships Drones help prevent rhino, elephant poaching DARPA's hot for futuristic helicopter-like delivery drones Drone deliveries get off the ground in Dubai Police: Man sent up drone to view fatal crash scene While Netflix's "Drone 2 Home" program is obviously a spoof, Amazon is apparently serious about drone deliveries. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos appeared on "60 Minutes" in December to unveil the company's unusual drone plan. (Disclosure: "60 Minutes" is produced by CBS, which also is the parent company to CNET.) Dubbed Amazon Prime Air, the idea is to deliver packages to customers via drone within 30 minutes of an order being placed. The service still requires more testing and clearance from the Federal Aviation Administration, so it might be another four to five years before Amazon's drones take to the skies. Netflix's satirical video was created by the DVD.Netflix.com team and was posted to YouTube with permission from the company, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Posted by : Unknown Tuesday, February 25, 2014

In a satirical YouTube video, the on-demand DVD video service announces that a "fleet of high-tech drones will deliver your disk to you within mere seconds of you adding it to your queue."



February 25, 2014 7:17 PM PST




Netflix's spoof DVD delivery drone.


(Credit: Screengrab by Dara Kerr/CNET)

What would be the fastest way to get DVD rentals to materialize in users' hands the moment they added them to their queue? The US Postal Service? No. Bike messenger? No. Delivery drones? Just maybe...


With a tongue-in-cheek YouTube video, Netflix takes a friendly jab at its competitor Amazon and its announcement last year that it was working on delivery drones. The parody video broadcasts the roll out of a "groundbreaking" new feature called "Drone 2 Home."


"Now we are getting back to our creative roots with our groundbreaking, same-day, home delivery subscription service: Drone 2 Home," Netflix's DVD Division general manager Hank Breeggemann says in the video.


The video shows a white, shoe-box sized, four-propeller drone carrying a red Netflix DVD envelope to people's doorsteps, across the San Francisco Bay, in front of St. Louis' Gateway Arch, and even into a public restroom.


"That's right, our fleet of high-tech drones will deliver your disk to you within mere seconds of you adding it to your queue," the video announces. "We have literally spent days working out most of the bugs. By enabling location services on your smartphone, the disk can come right to you wherever you may be."



While Netflix's "Drone 2 Home" program is obviously a spoof, Amazon is apparently serious about drone deliveries. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos appeared on "60 Minutes" in December to unveil the company's unusual drone plan. (Disclosure: "60 Minutes" is produced by CBS, which also is the parent company to CNET.)

Dubbed Amazon Prime Air, the idea is to deliver packages to customers via drone within 30 minutes of an order being placed. The service still requires more testing and clearance from the Federal Aviation Administration, so it might be another four to five years before Amazon's drones take to the skies.


Netflix's satirical video was created by the DVD.Netflix.com team and was posted to YouTube with permission from the company, according to the Los Angeles Times.



Translate

Like fanpage

Popular Post

Blog Archive

Powered by Blogger.

- Copyright © News and design logo -Metrominimalist- Powered by Blogger - Designed by Johanes Djogan -