Boston Dynamics' Logistics Robot Is Available For Purchase 30
Stretch, a logistics robot from Boston Dynamics that's capable of moving boxes and unloading cargo, is now on sale for anyone who wants to purchase one. Though, as TechCrunch notes, "deliveries are not expected until 2023 and 2024." From the report: The company predictably cites ongoing labor issues as a key driver in interest around the new robot. "Labor shortages and supply chain snags continue to create challenges in keeping the flow of goods moving," says CEO Robert Playter. "Stretch makes logistics operations more efficient and predictable, and it improves safety by taking on one of the most physically demanding jobs in the warehouse. Many of our early adopter customers have already committed to deploying the robot at scale, so we are excited Stretch will soon be put to work more broadly, helping retailers and logistics companies handle the continued surging demand for goods."
Industry trumps Nationalism (lil t intentional) (Score:2)
I've seen videos of these Boston Dynamics-like robots implementing quarantine in Shanghai. I'm preeeetty sure we've overcome nationalism in those instances in which it benefits us.
That selfish gene is a motherfucker.
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What does "implementing quarantine" mean?
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"What does "implementing quarantine" mean?"
Shooting miscreants with mini-guns, duh!
Can't find the price (Score:1)
But screw it, better to buy now than regret later. In for one.
Maybe I'll paint it in camo and program it to siphon gas from the neighbor's cars.
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Maybe I'll paint it in camo and program it to siphon gas from the neighbor's cars.
Which makes me wonder . . . will car battery electricity theft become a new crime problem . . . ?
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Which makes me wonder . . . will car battery electricity theft become a new crime problem . . . ?
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"Maybe I'll paint it in camo and program it to siphon gas from the neighbor's cars."
I'm sure it can fold T-shirts.
Or put 5 grams of coke in a small container...
Andrew Yang has entered the chat (Score:2)
Well, I guess here comes the new wave of automation. It started with the self-service kiosks, then the self-check out lanes, and now we'll have robots replace more mundane, low-skill, highly repetitive manual tasks. I guess it's time to go back to school and learn how to code and pull myself up by the bootstrap and learn bootstrap.
Yang doesn't have any solutions here (Score:2)
As the saying goes, for every sufficiently complex problem there is an answer that is simple, elegant and wrong.
Simple answers like Yang's don't work. We need a better, more thoughtful and holistic approach.
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It doesn't really (Score:2)
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its called health insurance. I use that thing judiciously. It lets me pop off at the mouth at work if and when i please.
i dont have to show up to the scrum having cards delt to me i can deal because if i get fired theres a nice 6 month paid vacation waiting for me.
so therefore when im on the job i do what i feel is right and so i grow. and when im not working i spend time studying and building on the things
i was al
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"Well, I guess here comes the new wave of automation. It started with the self-service kiosks, then the self-check out lanes, and now we'll have robots replace more mundane, low-skill, highly repetitive manual tasks."
Where TF is the blowjob kiosk?
It can't be rare earths, goddammit, get on with it!
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"Where TF is the blowjob kiosk?"
Ask and ye shall receive. https://youtu.be/ldy4LOgvUCw [youtu.be]
I live in Russia (Score:3)
so I guess that's a 'NO'?
Solution in search of a problem (Score:2)
The key issues with logistics right now is not labor shortages. It's LAND. specifically good land around a good port that a ship can pull up to and be unloaded. The port congestion we're seeing is partially driven by labor problems and COVID, but msotly driven by printing money going to average people resulting in greater consumer spending. That's fine, but the ports can't handle the extra load
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This only holds water because it assumes consumer spending must directly increase import volume. Increase US manufacturing to serve the rise of consumerism and this shipyard bottleneck you describe begins to subside.
But, yes, we could likely use a few additional ports to increase the general capacity, nonetheless.
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Go see the port at Los Angeles; I was just by there a few months back. The issue is glaringly obvious; the cranes unload the ships and put the containers down in the yard. When they run out of space to put the containers down, they stop. The port there is packed to the gills with containers, and it's primarily drayage issues, ie getting trucks in to then deliver the containers to the
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Well, whew good thing autonomous trucks [bloombergquint.com] are our future.
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Th
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The problem is, you can't just "make" a port
Disagree. Your list of requirements appears valid, but none of those items could not be artificially constructed given time and money. How badly do you want another port?
Only bad enough that you're willing to only build where it is cheap and easy?
Or badly enough that you're ready to construct a bay that didn't naturally occur, dredge the waterway to make it deep enough for large ship drafts, and pour thick concrete pads atop a foundation driven to bedrock?
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The root of the problem though is speed and not space. The systems in the US are designed to be labor intensive; why else would you require double- and triple-handling of a container (as the rule rather than the exception)?
The port business could use a shake-up. It would be interesting to see what at-sea unloading and transfer to RO-RO could do.
This isn't a logistics solution (Score:2)
This is about cost reduction by eliminating jobs. But you can't say that out loud. It would make people question what's going to happen when all those jobs go away.
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Land is a buffer in the situation you describe.
Almost never is merely increasing the size of the buffer a solution for the core issue.
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Labor shortages (Score:2)
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That is "labor shortage". The way you describe it is just a lot more honest. In capitalism, there is no difference between the two though. Demand is there, but not enough supply, hence "shortage". Of course, in capitalism, you can just offer to pay more to fix that problem, but greed (which is a very capitalist thing, there euphemistically called "profit maximization") is opposed to that.
Hence robots will be used were robots are cheaper. Of course, that "cheaper" is a localized assessment. For a whole socie