The Borneo Post

Amazon’s ‘collaborat­ive’ robots offer peek into the future

-

NEW YORK: Hundreds of orange robots zoom and whiz back and forth like miniature bumper cars – but instead of colliding, they’re following a carefully plotted path to transport thousands of items ordered from online giant Amazon.

A young woman fitted out in a red safety vest, with pouches full of sensors and radio transmitte­rs on her belt and a tablet in hand, moves through their complicate­d choreograp­hy.

This robot ballet takes place at the new Amazon order fulfilment centre that opened on Staten Island in New York in September.

In an 80,000 square- meter (855,000 square-foot) space filled with the whirring sounds of machinery, the Seattle-based ecommerce titan has deployed some of the most advanced instrument­s in the rapidly growing field of robots capable of collaborat­ing with humans.

The high- tech vest, worn at Amazon warehouses since last year, is key to the whole operation – it allows 21-year-old Deasahni Bernard to safely enter the robot area, to pick up an object that has fallen off its automated host, for example, or check if a battery needs replacing.

Bernard only has to press a button and the robots stop or slow or readjust their dance to accommodat­e her.

Amazon now counts more than 25 robotic centres, which chief technologi­st for Amazon Robotics Tye Brady says have changed the way the company operates.

“What used to take more than a day now takes less than an hour,” he said, explaining they are able to fit about 40 per cent more goods inside the same footprint.

For some, these fulfilment centres, which have helped cement Amazon’s dominant position in global online sales, are a perfect illustrati­on of the looming risk of humans being pushed out of certain business equations in favour of artificial intelligen­ce.

But Brady argues that robothuman collaborat­ion at the Staten Island facility, which employs more than 2,000 people, has given them a “beautiful edge” over the competitio­n.

Bernard, who was a supermarke­t cashier before starting at Amazon, agrees.

“I like this a lot better than my previous jobs,” she told AFP, as Brady looked on approvingl­y.

What role do Amazon employees play in what Brady calls the human-robot “symphony?”

In Staten Island, on top of tech-vest wearers like Bernard, there are ‘stowers,’ ‘pickers’ and ‘packers’ who respective­ly load up products, match up products meant for the same customers and build shipping boxes – all with the help of screens and scanners.

At every stage, the goal is to “extend people’s capabiliti­es” so the humans can focus on problemsol­ving and intervene if necessary, according to Brady.

At the age of 51, he has worked with robotics for 33 years, previously as a spacecraft engineer for MIT and on lunar landing systems of the Draper Laboratory in Massachuse­tts.

He is convinced the use of “collaborat­ive robots” is the key to future human productivi­ty – and job growth.

Since Amazon went all-in on robotics with the 2012 acquisitio­n of logistics robot- maker Kiva, gains have been indisputab­le, Brady says.

They’ve created 300,000 new jobs, bringing the total number of worldwide Amazon employees up to 645,000, not counting seasonal jobs.

“It’s a myth that robotics and automation kills jobs, it’s just a myth,” according to Brady.

“The data really can’t be denied on this: the more robots we add to our fulfillmen­t centers, the more jobs we are creating,” he said, without mentioning the potential for lost jobs at traditiona­l stores.

For Brady, the ideal example of human-robot collaborat­ion is the relationsh­ip between ‘R2D2’ and Luke Skywalker from ‘Star Wars.’

Their partnershi­p, in which ‘R2D2’ is always ready to use his computing powers to pull people out of desperate situations “is a great example of how humans and robots can work together,” he said.

But despite Brady’s enthusiasm for a robotic future, many are suspicious of the trend – a wariness that extends to the corporate giant, which this month scrapped highprofil­e plans for a new New York headquarte­rs in the face of local protests.

Attempts by Amazon employees to unionize, at Staten Island and other sites, have so far been successful­ly fought back by the company, further fuelling criticism.

At a press briefing held last month as part of the unionizati­on push, one employee of the facility, Rashad Long, spoke out about what he said were unsustaina­ble work conditions.

“We are not robots, we are human beings,” Long said.

Many suspect Amazon’s investment in robotics centers aims to eventually automate positions currently held by humans.

For Kevin Lynch, an expert in robotics from Northweste­rn University near Chicago, the developmen­t of collaborat­ive robots is “inevitable” and will indeed eventually eliminate certain jobs, such as the final stage of packing at Amazon for instance.

“I also think other jobs will be created,” he said. “But it’s easier to predict the jobs that will be lost than the jobs that will be created.”

“Robotics and art i f icial intelligen­ce bring clear benefits to humanity, in terms of our health, welfare, happiness, and quality of life,” said Lynch, who believes public policy has a key role to play in ensuring those benefits are shared, and that robotics and AI do not sharpen economic inequality.

“The growth of robotics and AI is inevitable,” he said. “The real question is, ‘how do we prepare for our future with robots?”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A woman works at a distributi­on station at the 855,000-square-foot Amazon fulfilment centre in Staten Island, one of the five boroughs of New York City. Inside a huge warehouse on Staten Island thousands of robots are busy distributi­ng thousands of items sold by the giant of online sales, Amazon.
— AFP photo A woman works at a distributi­on station at the 855,000-square-foot Amazon fulfilment centre in Staten Island, one of the five boroughs of New York City. Inside a huge warehouse on Staten Island thousands of robots are busy distributi­ng thousands of items sold by the giant of online sales, Amazon.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? A woman uses a computer to control robots at the 855,000-square-foot Amazon fulfilment centre in Staten Island. Amazon now counts more than 25 robotic centres, which chief technologi­st for Amazon Robotics Tye Brady says have changed the way the company operates.
— AFP photo A woman uses a computer to control robots at the 855,000-square-foot Amazon fulfilment centre in Staten Island. Amazon now counts more than 25 robotic centres, which chief technologi­st for Amazon Robotics Tye Brady says have changed the way the company operates.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia