11 10, 2024
Melinda French Gates launches $250M open-call funding opportunity for women’s health
Melinda French Gates on Wednesday launched Action for Women’s Health, a $250 million open call that ...
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11 Oct, 2024
Amazon unveiled new AI technology called Vision-Assisted Package Retrieval (VAPR) for the cargo hold of its electric Rivian vans, giving drivers audio and visual cues about which packages should be delivered at a given stop.
The system, announced Wednesday morning, integrates with the vehicle’s navigation system to project a green “O” on packages to be delivered at a given stop, and a red “X” on all others in the back of a delivery van. This reduces the need to manually sort and organize packages between stops, according to the company.
Amazon says VAPR, in the works since 2020, will be rolled out to 1,000 vans initially early next year. It’s an outgrowth of an Amazon Robotics Identification (AR-ID) system originally used in the company’s fulfillment centers.
It’s part of a larger effort by Amazon to use AI and machine learning to improve the efficiency of the 390,000 delivery drivers who work for independent Delivery Service Partners, delivering packages in Prime-branded uniforms and vehicles.
In some situations, Amazon’s automated routing algorithms have left those drivers scrambling to keep up. In this case, Amazon points to indications that the technology will make the job easier.
Amazon says its early tests resulted in “a 67% reduction in perceived physical and mental effort for drivers and more than 30 minutes saved per route.”
Its announcement quotes a driver in the North Boston area saying that VAPR has reduced the time emptying totes and organizing packages between stops to about a minute, vs. 2 to 5 minutes previously.
This was one of several announcements at Amazon’s annual “Delivering the Future” robotics, transportation, and logistics event in Nashville on Wednesday morning.
Other news included: