08 May 2017

Warehouse Jobs: You Might Fit In Somewhere

A slew of new automation specialists appear on the warehouse battlefield.
 
It was Amazon that drove America’s warehouse operators into the robot business.
Quiet Logistics, which ships apparel out of its Devens, Mass., warehouse, had been using robots made by a company called Kiva Systems. When Amazon bought Kiva in 2012, Quiet hired scientists. In 2015 it spun out a new company called Locus Robotics, which raised $8 million in venture capital. Last year, Locus unveiled its own warehouse robotics solution called the LocusBot—first using it for its own business, then selling them to companies that ship everything from housewares to auto parts.
Now, Locus has landed a bigger fish: It’s selling its robots to DHL Supply Chain (a unit of Deutsche Post DHL Group), the world’s largest third-party logistics company. DHL will use the machines at a Memphis, Tenn., location to help ship surgical devices to operating rooms across the country
Read more >> Bloomberg
                             
 
 

No comments:

Reports: Biden Allows Ukraine to Use U.S. Long-Range Missiles for Strikes Deeper Inside Russia

  France 24 13 hours ago Search inside image No concrete evidence on who fired missile, Poland's president says Visit