I'm actually surprised that they're not a lot more automated by now.
I may be the only one, but I don't like Amazon's business model.
Robots taking jobs from people so the company can have the lowest margins in the business, eventually putting all competitors out of business, resulting in even more job loss.
"Too cool"
I may be the only one, but I don't like Amazon's business model.
I'm looking forward to the day when the robot picks up the package and fly straight to my house in 15 min instead of just passing it to some human to put in a package.
Robots taking jobs from people so the company can have the lowest margins in the business, eventually putting all competitors out of business, resulting in even more job loss.
"Too cool"
I may be the only one, but I don't like Amazon's business model.
I just like robots, but yeah, what Carson said.
I also find these robots interesting in how fitted they are for the task. It's a pretty smart idea to make them very low, with a low cg, and then have them slide under a rack and lift it just enough to clear the floor.
Robots taking jobs from people so the company can have the lowest margins in the business, eventually putting all competitors out of business, resulting in even more job loss.
"Too cool"
I may be the only one, but I don't like Amazon's business model.
Watched for the drones. Stayed for the nice butt at 1:14.
On one hand it's cool, on the other hand it's also scary just how few humans they need - the rest will be out of work with no way of finding a replacement job.
Actually I didn't watch the video (blocked at work). I'm only assuming what it is based on previous "60 minutes" stories about it.Robots are not part of their business model. Robots are a tool to help them minimize labor costs, which virtually every company on this planet attempts to do.
Your problem is that you see robots running around a warehouse and you say "Oh, they move like people, so they're kinda like people-replacements. Those evil bastards!" I'll bet you don't say that when you look at a conveyor belt or a box sealer or a fork lift or a computer terminal .... or any of a million other labor-saving inventions that have benefited manufacturing and distribution over the past 200 years.
I had this argument with my brother over the holidays (he's top management for an oil company, one percent-er). He and all his peers can't find skilled labor, so they aren't sympathetic to unskilled labor being replaced by machines.
I, on the other hand, maintain that there has to be a way for everyone to make a good living, not just the ones lucky enough to be born smart, or with certain aptitudes. The jobs that the middle and lower end of the bell curve used to get are absolutely going/gone away.
I wonder what happens once all the unskilled jobs in America are eliminated over the next 20 years.