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Amazon reaches new milestone, becomes world's largest manufacturer and operator of…
Amazon reaches new milestone, becomes world's largest manufacturer and operator of…

Time of India

time02-07-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

Amazon reaches new milestone, becomes world's largest manufacturer and operator of…

Amazon has announced that it has reached a significant milestone, deploying its millionth worker robot across its global network of over 300 facilities. The company also revealed plans to power its entire robot fleet with a newly launched generative artificial intelligence (AI) model named " DeepFleet ." This expansion comes soon after company CEO Andy Jassy talked about job cuts and increasing automation. Amazon developing AI-powered robot fleet to boost efficiency According to Scott Dresser, Vice President of Amazon Robotics , this achievement solidifies Amazon's position as the world's largest manufacturer and operator of mobile robotics . Dresser stated that the new DeepFleet AI model will change how robots move within fulfillment centers, aiming to reduce fleet travel time by 10%. This efficiency gain is expected to lead to faster and more cost-effective package deliveries. Amazon began integrating robots into its operations in 2012, initially to transport inventory shelves. Since then, the roles of these automated workers have expanded, now including robots capable of lifting up to 1,250 pounds and fully autonomous units navigating facilities with customer orders. The company's continued investment in robotics and AI contrasts with some tech industry trends, though AI-powered humanoid robots are also anticipated to be deployed in Tesla factories this year. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Adidas Three Shorts With 60% Discount, Limited Stock Available Original Adidas Shop Now Undo Robots to work alongside humans: Amazon Dresser, while addressing anxieties about AI-led job cuts, emphasised that Amazon's robots 'work alongside our employees, handling heavy lifting and repetitive tasks while creating new opportunities for our front-line operators to develop technical skills.' He pointed to Amazon's new fulfillment center in Shreveport, Louisiana, which opened late last year and reportedly required 30% more employees in specialised roles like reliability, maintenance and engineering. However, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy recently told CNBC that the company's aggressive adoption of generative AI will inevitably lead to 'fewer people doing some of the jobs that the technology actually starts to automate.' While Jassy also stated that Amazon would continue to hire in AI and robotics, he admitted in an internal memo earlier this June that he expects the company's overall workforce to 'shrink in the coming years' due to technological advancements. AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now

Amazon's Robot Workforce Hits Ominous Milestone
Amazon's Robot Workforce Hits Ominous Milestone

Newsweek

time02-07-2025

  • Business
  • Newsweek

Amazon's Robot Workforce Hits Ominous Milestone

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Amazon now has more than one million robots operating inside its warehouses, nearly equaling the number of human workers. Amazon's expanding fleet of robots includes: Hercules, a lifter capable of handling 1,250 pounds; Pegasus, which sorts packages on conveyor belts; and Proteus, the company's first fully autonomous robot able to operate directly alongside people. The robots are especially productive in same-day delivery hubs where fewer human workers are employed and speed is crucial. An Amazon logo is displayed outside an Amazon Delivery Station on April 25, 2025 in San Diego, California. An Amazon logo is displayed outside an Amazon Delivery Station on April 25, 2025 in San Diego, a new report, the Wall Street Journal wrote, "Robots are also supplanting some employees, helping the company to slow hiring. "Amazon employs about 1.56 million people overall, with the majority working in warehouses. "The average number of employees Amazon had per facility last year, roughly 670, was the lowest recorded in the past 16 years, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis, which compared the company's reported workforce with estimates of its facility count." As per TechRadar, Amazon has claimed that productivity in these high-tech facilities is roughly 25% faster than in traditional warehouses. Amazon's Robotics Solutions In a statement to Newsweek, an Amazon spokesperson said, "Our robotics solutions are designed to automate tasks in an effort to continue improving safety, reducing repetition, and freeing our employees up to deliver for customers in more skilled ways. "Since introducing robots within Amazon's operations, we've continued to hire hundreds of thousands of employees to work in our facilities and created many new job categories worldwide, including positions like flow control specialists, floor monitors, and reliability maintenance engineers." The Expansion of AI In a press release, Amazon's VP of Robotics Scott Dresser explained that a new generative artificial intelligence (AI) Model will help the company increase robot mobility by 10%. "Called DeepFleet, this AI technology will coordinate the movement of robots across our fulfillment network, improving the travel time of our robotic fleet by 10% and enabling us to deliver packages to customers faster and at lower costs," Dresser noted. "These robots work alongside our employees, handling heavy lifting and repetitive tasks while creating new opportunities for our front-line operators to develop technical skills. "I'm particularly proud that since 2019, we've helped upskill more than 700,000 employees through various training initiatives, many focused on working with advanced technologies." 'We will need fewer people' At the same time, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy offered a more direct message in a letter to employees, warning that the expansion of AI across the company will lead to a leaner corporate workforce. In the letter, cited by Newsweek, he wrote, "As we roll out more Generative AI and agents, it should change the way our work is done. "We will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today, and more people doing other types of jobs." Critics Say Worker Cuts Are About Cost, Not Innovation Jassy's statement drew criticism from labor advocates and consultants who believe Amazon is prioritizing cost-cutting over employment. Speaking with Newsweek, Human Resources consultant Bryan Driscoll said, "The letter reads as a masterclass in spin. And this move isn't about leaner teams or working smarter. "It's about replacing human labor with machines - employees without the headache of dealing with humans, wages, benefits, and compliance." He added, "The company openly admits AI will reduce its total workforce but frames that as a net gain for customer experience - at least from those customers who can still afford to buy things. "What it actually means is that tens of thousands of people will lose their jobs not because they weren't performing, but because they can be replaced by a cheaper worker." Newsweek has contacted Amazon for comment via email. Newsweek's "What Should I Do?" offers expert advice to readers. If you have a personal dilemma, let us know via life@ We can ask experts for advice on relationships, family, friends, money and work, and your story could be featured on WSID at Newsweek. To read how Newsweek uses AI as a newsroom tool, click here.

Amazon deploys its 1 millionth robot in a sign of more job automation
Amazon deploys its 1 millionth robot in a sign of more job automation

CNBC

time02-07-2025

  • Business
  • CNBC

Amazon deploys its 1 millionth robot in a sign of more job automation

Amazon announced Monday its millionth worker robot, and said its entire fleet will be powered by a newly launched generative artificial intelligence model. The move comes at a time when more tech companies are cutting jobs and warning of automation. The million robot milestone — which joins Amazon's global network of more than 300 facilities — strengthens the company's position as the world's largest manufacturer and operator of mobile robotics, Scott Dresser, vice president of Amazon Robotics, said in a press release. Meanwhile, Dresser said that its new "DeepFleet" AI model will coordinate the movement of its robots within its fulfillment centers, reducing the travel time of the fleet by 10% and enabling faster and more cost-effective package deliveries. Amazon began deploying robots in its facilities in 2012 to move inventory shelves across warehouse floors, according to Dresser. Since then, their roles in factories have grown tremendously, ranging from those able to lift up to 1,250 pounds of inventory to fully autonomous robots that navigate factories with carts of customer orders. Meanwhile, AI-powered humanoid robots — designed to mimic human movement and shape — could be deployed this year at factories owned by Tesla. But although advancements in AI robotics like those working in Amazon facilities come with the promise of productivity gains, they have also raised concerns about mass job loss. A Pew Research survey published in March found that both AI experts and the general public see factory workers as one of the groups most at risk of losing their jobs because of AI. That's a concern Dresser appeared to attempt to address in his statements. "These robots work alongside our employees, handling heavy lifting and repetitive tasks while creating new opportunities for our front-line operators to develop technical skills," Dresser said. He added that Amazon's "next-generation fulfillment center" in Shreveport, Louisiana, which was launched late last year, required 30% more employees in reliability, maintenance, and engineering roles. However, the news of Amazon's robot expansion came soon after CEO Andy Jassy told CNBC that Amazon's rapid rollout of generative AI will result in "fewer people doing some of the jobs that the technology actually starts to automate." Jassy said that even as AI eliminates jobs in certain areas, Amazon will continue to hire more employees in AI, robotics and elsewhere. But in a memo to employees earlier in June, the CEO had admitted that he expects the company's workforce to shrink in the coming years in light of technological advancements. The decline may have already begun. CNBC reported that Amazon cut more than 27,000 jobs in 2022 and 2023, and had continued to make more targeted cuts across business units. Other big tech CEOs such as Shopify's CEO Tobi Lutke also recently warned of the impact that AI will have on staffing. That comes as a vast array of firms investing in and adopting AI execute rounds of layoffs. According to which tracks technology industry layoffs, 551 companies laid off roughly 153,000 employees last year. And a World Economic Forum report in February found that 48% of U.S. employers plan to reduce their workforce due to AI.

Amazon's newest robot gains a sense of touch
Amazon's newest robot gains a sense of touch

Boston Globe

time07-05-2025

  • Business
  • Boston Globe

Amazon's newest robot gains a sense of touch

In Amazon's vast storage warehouses, such as its Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up The company Advertisement Now Vulcan can also Humans will still load many items onto the shelving pods. Vulcan will concentrate on filling cubbies at the lower and higher sections of the eight-foot-tall pods. That should spare the human workers from bending and stretching in ways that could cause repetitive stress injuries. Advertisement 'Vulcan is really good at doing that part of the job,' Dresser said. 'So we provide better work environment, safer work environment, for our employees.' While that may require fewer workers loading the pods, Amazon will add jobs in robot maintenance, Dresser said. 'As we deploy more robots, we need more skilled folks that are helping us with maintenance,' he said. So far the Vulcan robots have only been installed at a facility in Spokane, Washington, and Hamburg, Germany. The plan is to deploy thousands of the touch-sensing bots at warehouses around the world, Dresser said. The team that designed Vulcan named the bot after the Roman god of fire and blacksmithing, he said. 'The team is a builder team and they like this connotation of a forge and building something new,' Dresser said. Amazon has already manufactured more than 750,000 of its other types of robots at its facilities in Westborough and North Reading. The Amazon Robotics unit was created more than a decade ago when the company bought local startup Kiva Systems, helping stoke Aaron Pressman can be reached at

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