Amazon has shelved the picking system months after launch, reallocating staff and repurposing the technology for new automation programs across its network.
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You can now buy a humanoid robot on Amazon
Unitree G1 humanoid robot brings consumer robotics to mainstream retail with 23 joints, 2-hour battery life, and plug-and-play demos for $16,000.
The robots inside Amazon's Kent Fulfillment Center are getting smarter — and the company is pressing forward with new ...
Amazon said Blue Jay's core tech will be used for other robotics projects and the employees who worked on it were moved to ...
Amazon is going forward with plans to demolish the former Central Steel & Wire Plant, 3000 W. 51st St., and replace it with a 230,000-square-foot warehouse.
AI efficiencies promise to transform Amazon.com, Inc.'s $200 billion-per-year logistics network. Click here to find out why ...
Amazon proudly announced a new warehouse robot made up of multiple robotic arms called Blue Jay. It has given up on it ...
Amazon has dismantled a robot for warehouse use after only a few months. The technology is to be further developed.
Last October, Amazon announced Blue Jay, a new robotic arm system that was supposed to act as "an extra set of hands" for its warehouse workers. This week, Amazon decided Blue Jay is no longer needed.
Serve Robotics, a San Francisco-based startup spun out of Uber, has emerged as one of the most aggressive players in the race to automate local delivery.
Amazon committed to adding 100,000 Rivian vans to its delivery fleet by 2030, and grew its Rivian van fleet by more than 50% in 2025, alone!
The shift comes just a few months after Amazon launched Blue Jay in October, calling it “an extra set of hands” for warehouse employees. Blue Jay wasn’t designed for the smaller, more flexible ...
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