Amazon pulled the plug on Blue Jay, its high-profile warehouse robot, in January 2026, barely three months after the system ...
Amazon has dismantled a robot for warehouse use after only a few months. The technology is to be further developed.
Just months after calling Blue Jay a core warehouse technology, the company shelved it as part of a broader shift in how its ...
The discontinuation marks a major course correction in Amazon's robotics strategy – and underscores the persistent gap between AI's rapid progress in software and its slower, ...
Amazon’s robotic workforce is what keeps the modern fulfillment machine moving. These systems don’t just follow simple patterns; there’s a whole world of coordination, sensors, and software that make ...
More than 3,000 robots navigate the four-story fulfillment center in Kent, guided by new algorithms that are making them faster and more efficient.
Amazon will soon use more robots in its warehouses than human employees — with more than 1 million machines already deployed across facilities, according to a report. Many of these robots cover the ...
Amazon, the second-largest private employer in the world, with 1.5 million workers, is accelerating its use of warehouse robots as part of a major automation drive, The New York Times reported on ...
Amazon is developing a software for humanoid robots that are designed to ‘spring out’ of the thousands of delivery vans roaming the country, according to a report. The $2 trillion company is testing ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Ron Schmelzer covers AI and data best practices at Forbes since 2018 Amazon’s robotics group announced last week that it just hit ...
Amazon wants more of these... everywhere. - Cindy Shebley via Getty UPDATE Wednesday, 12:15 p.m. ET: This story includes a statement from Amazon responding to the New York Times article. Referencing ...