Thursday, 14 June 2018

A giant new retail fulfillment center in China has only four employees

JD.com, one of China’s big e-commerce companies, has unveiled a warehouse that, it says, only keeps humans on board to service the robots.
Wage hikes: The rising cost of labor has triggered a race to automate industry in China. That has translated into ambitious investment and research in robotics, and it is likely to figure in China’s grand AI push as well.
Automation angst: The news conjures images of rapid automation and job displacement. But it’s important to note that the process of filling retail orders on a large scale is already heavily automated. Step inside one of Amazon’s fulfillment centers, for instance, and you’ll see robots moving around shelves of goods, as well as automated systems routing and tracking products.
Pick that up: While many fulfillment tasks are easily automatable and scalable, some, like picking and packing items, are more difficult to automate. As a video released by JD.com shows, the company is trying to tackle some challenging stuff, like packing products, using specialized machinery.
—Will Knight

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