Muscat Daily

Will robots replace humans at Amazon?

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Westboroug­h, US - At Amazon's

robotics laboratory on the outskirts of Boston, Massachuse­tts,

the company's newest automaton "Sparrow" picks out items to be shipped to customers, dis

playing human hand-like dexterity.

It is the e-commerce giant's most advanced robot yet and could soon do the job of the hundreds of thousands of Amazon employees who sort and send five billion packages annually.

The developmen­t of "Sparrow," and other robots like "Robin" and "Cardinal," are fueling fears that Amazon's warehouses will one day be run by machines, leading to huge layoffs.

Amazon's robotics chief Tye Brady plays down such concerns, which have been expressed by labor unions.

"It's not machines replacing people," he tells journalist­s during a tour of the laboratory,

which opened in Westboroug­h in October last year.

"It's actually machines and people working together in order to collaborat­e to do a job."

Equipped with cameras and cylindrica­l tubes, Sparrow can successful­ly detect and select an individual item from millions of

products of different shapes and sizes.

It gently sucks up items that arrive on a conveyor belt and distribute­s them into the appropriat­e basket in front of it using its robotic arm.

Robin and Cardinal can only redirect entire packages, making Sparrow Amazon's first robot to be able to handle individual products.

"Given the variety of materials we have in our warehouses, Sparrow is a significan­t accomplish­ment," says Brady.

Working with the robotic trio is a small army of machines, in

cluding "Proteus," which can

carry hundreds of kilograms of items around warehouses.

The creations will free employees from repetitive tasks to focus on "more rewarding and interestin­g" activities while "improving safety," Brady insists.

Amazon's focus is ensuring that as little time as possible passes between the moment a customer orders an item and the moment it arrives at his or her

door.

Drones

That goal has led some workers to accuse the company of treating them like "slaves" and of de

priving them of food and toilet breaks.

In statements, Amazon has insisted it provides "a safe and positive workplace" for employees and, apart from one warehouse in New York, has resisted unionizati­on.

Amazon's desire to deliver items quicker is driving its investment in automation.

By the end of this year it will begin delivering packages weighing up to two kgs in less than an hour from warehouses in Lockeford, California and College Station, Texas.

The company aims to deliver 500mn packages by drone by the end of the decade, including in major US cities such as Boston, Atlanta and Seattle.

Around 75 per cent of Amazon's five billion annual orders is handled at some point by a robot, according to Joe Quinlivan, vice president of Amazon Robotics.

For decades the convention­al wisdom was that increased automation destroys workforces.

Studies now suggest that moving towards robots in ecommerce will not lead to mas

sive job losses in the short to medium term due to the huge growth in demand.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Hercules robots are tested at Amazon's BOS27 Robotics Innovation Hub in Westboroug­h, Massachuse­tts on November 10
(AFP) Hercules robots are tested at Amazon's BOS27 Robotics Innovation Hub in Westboroug­h, Massachuse­tts on November 10

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