Amazon's Robot Workforce Grows By 50 Percent In Just One Year (siliconrepublic.com) 49
Amazon hires a lot of people. But the expansion of its army of orange-wheeled robots is more than keeping pace. An anonymous reader writes: E-commerce and cloud giant Amazon has revealed that it now has 45,000 robots across 20 fulfilment centres around the world. This is a 50 percent increase on the same time last year, when the company said that it employed 30,000 robots alongside its 306,000 people. Amazon uses the robots to automate the picking and packing process at large warehouses. The robots are 16in tall and weigh 145kg. They can travel at 5mph and can carry packages that weigh 317kg. The robots became part of the company's workforce when Amazon acquired Kiva Systems in 2012 for $775m.
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You forgot to mention that, at least by default, they are toggled to the "don't kill all humans" setting.
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You forgot to mention that, at least by default, they are toggled to the "don't kill all humans" setting.
The problem is they hired the cheapest programmers they could find in India and between when the specs where developed and the programmers got them that setting got changed to "kill all humans". You get what you pay for when you just base quality of the programmers on how little they cost.
I am just waiting for a disgruntle coder to slip in "take a chance" in their programming...
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I'd like a gruntled coder.
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You forgot to mention that, at least by default, they are toggled to the "don't kill all humans" setting.
Oh, wait, you wanted That setting?
Um.
Sorry.
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doesn't feel pity, remorse or fear, and absolutely will not stop... ever, until you are unemployed!
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The robots are 16in tall and weigh 145kg.
the specifications for the robots are not correct at all. these machines weigh slightly more than 340 kilograms
They probably started hiring American robots...
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They probably started hiring American robots...
You can tell they're American because they have US flag decals on them
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Is it just me to worry about the new Amazon? (Score:4, Funny)
Robots that make things connected to drones that deliver things, all run by a computer algorithm in the cloud that no single human understands.
What could possibly go wrong?
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No one has the cash to buy anything after being put out of work. Or the taxes get very high when people start turning to the er / jail / prison as there doctor.
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No one has the cash to buy anything after being put out of work. Or the taxes get very high when people start turning to the er / jail / prison as there doctor.
Thus why lowering corporate tax rates are ridiculous - personal income is going to be slashed by automation, so where will governments get their income from if corporate rates are dropped?
Meh, plenty of people understand it (Score:2)
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What could possibly go wrong?
Your delivery, presumably.
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Sooner or later, someone will find out that long ago, the Amazon headquarters were flooded with a deadly neurotoxin, leaving none alive.
Don't worry, Trump will deport them (Score:3, Funny)
Send those suckers back to China where they were probably made and give those jobs back to American robots.
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Corporations and robots are people and will be able to vote soon.
See, Trump is creating jobs.
Robots (Score:2)
I for one welcome our new robot overlords
Perhaps this explains... (Score:1)
This is only a temporary phenomenon. (Score:2)
Not necessarily (Score:4, Insightful)
I said nobody _likes_ to talk about it (Score:2)
Our company as well (Score:2)
We had 2 robots, now we have 3, a 50% majoration.
Did you even RTFS? (Score:2)
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I'm not quite sure you go the parents joke there buddy.
I did enjoy reading your dystopian rant though.
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It's also at least 15 thousand new employees they didn't need to hire (give or take an engineer or two)
But that's really not true. The robots don't eliminate the need for human employees.They just carry the pods (four-sided metal and fabric shelves) to the stowers and pickers, who are still people. So whereas these people used to have to traverse a giant warehouse of shelves to stow and pick merchandise, now they just stand in one spot and the shelves come to them. Which would you prefer, as an employee?
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Robots will receive basic income? (Score:1)