Behind the scenes of how Amazon's Kiva robotic systems work. This one is apparently showing a Staples warehouse.
From YT: Kiva Systems founder and CEO Mick Mountz narrates a play-by-play video of how Kiva robots automate a warehouse environment.
Complete video available for free at:
http://fora.tv/conference/wired_busin...
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How Robots Think: Why Artificial Intelligence Is Nothing Like the Human Mind
Mick Mountz, Founder & CEO, Kiva Systems
in conversation with Jason Tanz
Mick Mountz is founder and CEO of Kiva Systems. Mountz founded Kiva Systems in 2003, after experiencing the inadequacy of existing material-handling technologies for ecommerce at the grocery delivery startup Webvan. Kiva's integrated order-fulfillment solution employs hundreds of mobile robots and distributed intelligence to enable faster, more flexible ecommerce distribution centers for companies like The Gap, Saks Fifth Avenue, Diapers.com, Staples, Walgreens, and Crate and Barrel. Under Mountz's leadership, Kiva was ranked sixth on the 2009 Inc. 500 list of the fastest growing private companies in the US.
Before joining Webvan, Mountz spent three years as a product manager at Apple Computer, where he helped move new technologies like FireWire, DVD, Fast Ethernet, and 3D graphics acceleration into the standard desktop platform.
He began his career as a mechanical and manufacturing engineer at Motorola. In 2008, Mountz received an Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award in the New England region. He holds twelve U.S. technology patents
6 Comments
lucky760says...*quality
I love videos showing Amazon's technology.
siftbotsays...Boosting this quality contribution up in the Hot Listing - declared quality by lucky760.
antjokingly says...Siftbot needs this job!
*geek
*quality
I love videos showing Amazon's technology.
siftbotsays...Adding video to channels (Geek) - requested by ant.
siftbotsays...Tags for this video have been changed from 'Amazon, Kiva, Fora, Staples' to 'Amazon, Kiva, Fora, Staples, warehouse, picker' - edited by lucky760
articiansays...Given the recent revelations of how poorly Amazon employees were treated, someone really needs to splice in footage of humans working at Amazon, but keep the audio and presentation.
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