In the past few weeks, through our posts, we have introduced
you to some data about how people may work with computers in the future. Today
we are here to discuss how these interface changes are helping humans at large and
are making their lives easier.
Have you ever seen a huge warehouse where the
workers go in and bring new orders to the delivery dock? It
takes time and effort for them to get to the required items and bring them out.
An order may consist of more than one item for which and many workers may be required
to complete the order. Alternately, if only one person is working on your
order, the time to complete the order might be unacceptably long. As technology
evolved, small pickup vans were used in warehouses to reduce the workload of the
workers. Though this significantly reduced the physical effort required, the
time aspect was still an issue for long and complex orders. Many stores strived
to fix this delivery issue but there was no good way to speed up order
completion. Increasing the number of workers did not help, as it increased both
costs and management complexity.
To fix this problem, the most practical solution has
been to bring more machines into the process.
In doing this, the big questions are:
1.
Do we have to direct the machine every
time to get the required material?
2.
Will the machine just help find the item
while the worker still picks it up?
3.
Will the machine be as big as a human?
The answer to all these questions is now a simple “No”.
We started this blog with “learn to talk to
machines.” The next big step ahead is making the machines talk to each other as
well.
What languages do the machines speak?
One important method is called Client-Server
Communication. This is a kind of the boss-subordinate relation where the. Server
computer is the boss and the clients are the machines programmed to do what the
boss says.
Another important aspect is the barcode. With this
form of coded communication, the robots navigate their path to destination and
back.
Machines can work tirelessly; they don’t need
lunch or coffee breaks; just enough time to charge.
...and Amazon is adopting this new technology at its warehouse. Look at this blog: http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/03/25/disruptions-at-amazon-the-robot-world-comes-a-little-closer/
ReplyDeletewell written
ReplyDeleteThis is a really cool concept for warehouse order fulfillment! Thanks for sharing!
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ReplyDeleteVery well written. Thank you for sharing..
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ReplyDeleteGood work Rohit! Just a tit bit of info - Amazon bought Kiva systems a few months ago. We (The company I work for) were one of the first users of Kiva robots for Distribution and manufacturing applications. Although, the benefits were huge, the bugs introduced by the robots clouded the advantages.I guess it also depends heavily on the upstream and downstream systms connected to the application which has a profound affect on the overall performance.
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