Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Robotics Businesses Technology

Amazon Introduces 'Sparrow' Robotic Arm That Can Do Repetitive Warehouse Tasks (cnbc.com) 33

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC: Amazon on Thursday showed off a new robot that could one day assist warehouse workers with some of the more tedious aspects of the job. The company unveiled "Sparrow," a robotic arm that can pluck millions of items of varying shapes and sizes, on stage at the Delivering the Future conference near Boston, where it showcased new robotics, transportation and last-mile delivery technologies. Amazon says Sparrow uses computer vision and artificial intelligence to move products before they're packaged. A video of Sparrow shows the robotic arm picking up a board game, a bottle of vitamins and a set of sheets -- all the kinds of items that might flow through one of the company's warehouses -- and deftly placing them in crates.

Suction cups attached to the surface of the robot allow it to firmly grasp items. Previous iterations of robotic arms have been able to pick up boxes, which are generally uniform in their shape but might vary in size. But Sparrow is capable of handling items with varying curvature and size, said Jason Messinger, principal technical product manager of robotic manipulation at Amazon Robotics, in a demonstration. "This is not just picking the same things up and moving it with high precision, which we've seen in previous robots," Messinger said. The robotic arm can identify around 65% of Amazon's product inventory, the company said.

While the introduction of robots to the warehouse often raises questions about whether human jobs will be replaced, Amazon says Sparrow will "take on repetitive tasks," freeing employees up to focus on other things. The company also said the technology can improve safety in the workplace, although that prospect has been debated. An investigation by Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting found the company's warehouses with robots have higher injury rates than facilities without automation.
Further reading: Amazon Unveils Smaller Delivery Drone That Can Fly in Rain
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Amazon Introduces 'Sparrow' Robotic Arm That Can Do Repetitive Warehouse Tasks

Comments Filter:
  • big and needs vacuum power? does not seem mobile

    • big and needs vacuum power? does not seem mobile

      From the photo in TFA, it does not look mobile.

      But small battery-powered vacuum pumps [amazon.com], powerful enough for suction cups, are cheap, reliable, and often used in robots.

  • by Skapare ( 16644 ) on Thursday November 10, 2022 @07:18PM (#63042295) Homepage

    While the introduction of robots to the warehouse often raises questions about whether human jobs will be replaced, Amazon says Sparrow will "take on repetitive tasks," freeing employees up to focus on other things.

    like wondering how to deal with no paycheck. more like freeing Amazon up to pay more parts suppliers.

    • There is plenty more work to be done instead of getting repetitive strain injuries.
    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      Which is the employees choice. Evidently working in a not well air conditioned warehouse or during a tornado is not what most wish to do. They now have the opportunity to find better employment.
    • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
      I worked in a warehouse a while ago. My job literally involved shoving shit in boxes, packing material and product, taping it shut and pushing it down the line to be loaded onto a truck. They bought and implemented a "robot" that taped boxes shut. Do you know how it affected my job? I still had to shove product and packing material into a box and push it down the line to be taped shut, then loaded onto the truck. Now I could just do it 1% (or whatever) faster. Some bean counter did the math and figured
    • Progressives claim that Amazon warehouse work is too fast paced and inhumane (from a first-world problems perspective) now they complain that those jobs are going away. I believe it was a progressive journalist who once told a coal miner losing his job to "learn to code"
      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        During the first day orientation Fulfillment Center employees are told that the job is going to be automated as soon as possible so they should only consider it temporary.

  • will it carry their piss bottle for them?

    or maybe replace the bottle by automating the insertion and removal of a catheter?

  • The Big Bang Theory milked all the humor from Howard playing with his robot arm.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • Can't be cheaper than an Amazon worker drone.

    Automation only happens when slave wages become too expensive, I highly doubt that this has happened to Amazon already.

  • It won't ask to unionize!
  • Getting a robot to pick up random shaped objects of varying hardness and fragility is harder than successfully operating the claw arm game at an arcade.

  • choosing ridiculously oversized boxes for each product?
    • Or pick a cardboard box for something soft and not fragile, while also picking a weak plastic bubblewrap mailer for something incredibly fragile?

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

Working...