TL;DR: Amazon is reportedly developing humanoid robots for delivering products, currently preparing to test them in an indoor obstacle course called the "humanoid park." This comes after recent ...
Amazon's warehouse network is racing toward a future in which fleets of machines handle much of the lifting, sorting, and ...
This transcript was prepared by a transcription service. This version may not be in its final form and may be updated. Jessica Mendoza: When you step inside Amazon's warehouse in Shreveport, Louisiana ...
Robots could soon outnumber their human counterparts at Amazon warehouses, as the online retail giant doubles down on its automated workforce, according to a story in the Wall Street Journal. Amazon ...
Amazon has more than doubled the number of robots in its warehouses to 750,000. They help reduce walking distances and repetitive motions for workers.
Inside Amazon’s 100,000-square-foot Greenwood warehouse—which provides the greater Indianapolis area same-day shipping for everything from paper plates to vitamins—robots and people collaborate in ...
Amazon is developing artificial intelligence software for humanoid package delivery robots, and reportedly has plans to soon test the robots at its San Francisco offices. According to a June 5 report ...
Amazon’s machines are much more than simple devices for moving stock around, like driverless forklifts. One new robot, “Vulcan,” has a “sense of touch,” The Wall Street Journal reports, which lets it ...
Amazon's workforce may start to look a little less human in a few years. The New York Times reports that the company plans to avoid adding more than half a million jobs by 2033 by putting more robots ...
Amazon’s Pegasus robotic drive system retrieves finished packages from employees and sorts them for delivery. Pegasus is one of three kinds of robots Amazon uses in its warehouses. (Photo courtesy of ...