Amazon shelved its Blue Jay warehouse robot within months of launch, underscoring how hard it is to scale AI robotics cost-effectively.
Just months after calling Blue Jay a core warehouse technology, the company shelved it as part of a broader shift in how its fulfillment network will work.
In more than a dozen warehouses across the San Antonio area, Amazon robots that go by names such as Robin, Sparrow, Sequoia and Titan are doing the heavy lifting to get goods to customers this holiday ...
Amazon’s recent push to integrate robots into its delivery operations marks a significant shift in how the company plans to enhance efficiency and reduce costs. The tech giant aims to replace 500,000 ...
Amazon's newest generation of warehouse robots is no longer a side experiment tucked into a few pilot facilities. The company now relies on automated systems across dozens of fulfillment and sortation ...
One of the great things about Amazon is its fast delivery options, especially if you're an Amazon Prime subscriber. That speed is made possible by a massive logistics operation. Amazon stocks products ...
Amazon will soon use more robots in its warehouses than human employees — with more than 1 million machines already deployed across facilities, according to a report. Many of these robots cover the ...
The discontinuation marks a major course correction in Amazon's robotics strategy – and underscores the persistent gap between AI's rapid progress in software and its slower, ...