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It’s
not over, but it is: DHL has won the 2007
edition of the “Great Package Race”
competition dreamed up by Professor John
Barthold at Georgia Tech, where the three
main parcel shippers are annually to see
which can get packages the fastest to challenging
locations all over the globe.
The
packages were shipped on April 13 from Atlanta
to five extremely difficult locations. While
not all the packages have been delivered,
Georgia Tech has already declared DHL the
winner (see The
Great Package Race, 2007).
As of April 20, DHL had delivered all of
its packages. As of April 25, FedEx had
delivered three packages, one was being
held for some kind of payment, and one had
been declined. UPS had delivered two packages,
had another still en route, was returning
another (“service not available”),
and had declined to take one.
The
locations were challenging, to say the least:
- Apia,
the only city on Upulu, one of the islands
comprising the country of Samoa,
in the western Pacific Ocean. Upulu has
no street addresses.
- Florianopolis,
an island off the coast of southern Brazil
just above Uruguay; considered by the
carriers to be a “remote area.”
- Harare,
capital of Zimbabwe,
which is currently experiencing hyperinflation
and political unrest.
- Tikrit,
birthplace of Saddam Hussein and a center
of Sunni insurgency in Iraq.
- Yangon,
until recently, capital of Myanmar,
one of the most isolated countries in
the world. The city was formerly known
as Rangoon, Burma.
So
just how much does it cost to ship a package
to Tikrit these days? DHL did it for $125.26,
and got it there in 4 days. |
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