Found in Robotics News & Content, with a score of 16.62
…to the untrained eye. As Simon Kalouche, founder of Nimble Robotics, put it, “No one wants to automate and lose throughput in the process.” That may sound silly, but it has happened. We talked to several robotics experts and asked for their advice on success with the latest automated fulfillment systems. E-commerce, workforce drive automation “Transformation for robotic automation is picking up speed across traditional and new industries,” said Milton Guerry, president of the International Federation of Robotics (IFR). Guerry cited e-commerce as a hotbed in particular. “There are thousands of robots installed worldwide today that did not exist in…
Found in Robotics News & Content, with a score of 34.73
Nimble Robotics Inc. this week said that its robots have picked and packed hundreds of thousands of customer orders on a daily basis. The San Francisco-based startup claimed that its robots use artificial intelligence to “pick, pack, and fulfill online orders to enable the fastest, most affordable, and most sustainable on-demand e-commerce fulfillment.” “E-commerce continues to grow rapidly, but the available warehouse labor force is actually declining,” said Simon Kalouche, founder and CEO of Nimble Robotics. “These opposing trends are creating historic labor shortages and a growing labor supply void. Our robots are being used to augment the human workforce…
Found in Robotics News & Content, with a score of 14.50
…warehouses. This trend will likely continue. Manufacturers such as Nimble Robotics are investing heavily in this market, and industry analysts predict that autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) alone will be worth $6.8 billion in 2025. Increasingly sophisticated machine learning algorithms enable robots to rapidly identify objects. Thanks to lidar and infrared sensors, they can perceive items in superhuman ways rather than rely on sight or touch alone. Speaking of touch, robot suppliers have studied and applied human-machine interaction lessons, with touchscreens rather than buttons and systems such as Veo Robotics' that slow robots to safe speeds when they sense people are…
Found in Robotics News & Content, with a score of 16.13
…this space, including Berkshire Grey, AutoStore, Locus Robotics, and Nimble Robotics, and we've been busy with existing projects.” RightPick 3 includes cognitive improvements “We first launched RightPick in 2017 at ProMat,” recalled Martinelli. “As we've worked with integrators on projects, we've learned that they want robotic item-handling systems that are relatively easy to plug and play with different aspects of automation, such as ASRS [automated storage and retrieval systems].” RightPick 3 can pick faster and handle a broader range of items than its predecessors, said RHR. The system has a modular hardware design, well-defined application programming interfaces (APIs), and international…