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RightHand Robotics Automates a New Type of Warehouse Work: Recognizing, Picking Up Items From Boxes (qz.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Quartz: A startup called RightHand robotics recently began piloting technology that automates a task robots have previously struggled to master: recognizing and picking up items from boxes. RightHand can't say which companies are part of its pilot project and Amazon didn't reply to a request for comment. But the new technology could help the ecommerce giant with a problem that has long vexed it. Like robots elsewhere, Amazon's robots retrieve entire shelves and transport them to humans who pick out items from them. They can find and move a shelf that holds a box of shirts, but they aren't capable of removing the single shirt from that box to be packed into an order. In order to pick items from boxes, robots need to master the more complex task of identifying a wide range of objects and adjusting their grips accordingly. RightHand robotics, which was started by a team of researchers from Harvard Biorobotics Lab, the Yale Grab Lab, and MIT, built a solution called RightPick that, according to co-founder Leif Jentoft, can pick items at a rate of 500 to 600 per hour -- a speed on par with a human worker. It uses a machine learning background and a sensitized robot hand to recognize and handle thousands of items.

3 of 56 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Smash the Robots by FatdogHaiku · · Score: 2

    Right? Because then we have a lucrative business opportunity for technically minded people to fix the smashed robots!

    You would think so but NO! For I have perfected the robot smashing robot!
    Humans could never keep up with this titian, only my smashed robot repairing robot will do!

    Note to self:
    Hide smashed robot repairing robot from robot smashing robot this time...

    --
    You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
  2. Re:Robotic Pickers by kobaz · · Score: 2

    The year is 2025... There's going to be such a massive amount of items that a household orders from Amazon, packed so furiously by our robot overlords, that in order to maintain our sanity, and ease the strain of endlessly ordering, receiving, categorizing, putting away, retrieving, and consuming, said items ordered from Amazon, we as a human race will need to acquire robot helpers.

    So soon, our houses will be whirring with robots, ordering items, preparing items, and giving us our items, shipped from the Amazon robot assembly line. When one breaks, the others will automatically issue a RMA back to Amazon to return the defective unit, which will be received, repaired, assembled, and shipped again by our robot overlords. This new replacement robot will be automatically delivered, unpackaged, and activated by the already present backup household robots and will immediately join the crew, back where it left off.

    And now that the human race finally has food growing, food harvesting, food preparation, construction, health care, and everything else completely automated, us humans can finally sit back, relax, and start to enjoy what we were really put here on Earth to do...

    ... to build more robots.

    --

    The goal of computer science is to build something that will last at least until we've finished building it.
  3. This is THE big change by aberglas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Robots that can see. And respond in sensible ways.

    "Bin Picking" requires recognizing which objects are which, and what their orientation ("pose") is. Then plan a way to move to collect them.

    That is an order of magnitude more sophisticate than simply moving in rigid, predefined ways to work on things that have been precisely positioned in advanced.

    It opens up whole new fields of automation.

    And it is not that new, bin picking robots have been around for a while. They are getting better. This is only a story because Amazon is doing it now.