After 13 years of deploying robots into its warehouses, Amazon reached a brand new milestone.
The tech behemoth now has a million robots in its warehouses, the corporate announced Monday. This one millionth robotic was lately delivered to an Amazon achievement facility in Japan.
That determine places Amazon on monitor to succeed in one other landmark: its huge community of warehouses might quickly have the identical variety of robots working as folks, in accordance with reporting from the Wall Street Journal. The WSJ additionally reported that 75% of Amazon’s world deliveries at the moment are assisted not directly by a robotic.
TechCrunch reached out to Amazon for extra data.
The corporate additionally introduced it’s releasing a brand new generative AI mannequin known as DeepFleet for its warehouse robots. This AI mannequin, which may coordinate the robots’ routes inside the firm’s warehouses extra effectively, will assist enhance the velocity of its robotic fleet by 10%, in accordance with Amazon.
The corporate used Amazon Sagemaker — the AWS cloud studio that helps construct and deploy AI fashions — to create DeepFleet. Amazon educated the mannequin by itself warehouse and stock knowledge.
Amazon’s one-millionth robotic represents greater than only a quantity. The corporate has improved its fleet of robots in recent times, including new capabilities and fashions.
In Could, the corporate unveiled its newest robotic, Vulcan. This mannequin has two arms, one designed for rearranging stock, and one other with a digital camera and suction cup to seize objects. Most notably, these Vulcan robots have a way of “contact” that permits it to really feel the objects it’s grabbing, in accordance with Amazon.
In October 2024, the corporate introduced its “next-generation achievement facilities” which would come with 10x as many robots as their present services, along with human staff. The primary of those new robotic-powered facilities opened shortly after in Shreveport, Louisiana, close to the state’s Texas border.
Amazon initially began build up its robotic capabilities again in 2012 alongside its acquisition of Kiva Techniques.