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Amazon Robotics chief explains why idea of ‘people versus machines’ on AI rollout is the ‘wrong mindset’

The man responsible for the world’s largest mobile industrial robot fleet will not replace human common sense.

This week, retail and technology giant Amazon announced that the one millionth specially designed and built robot was squeezed around the warehouses around the world.

Chief Technology Specialist Tye Brady announced that Amazon Robotics has created a new AI model to strengthen the boats that move this product.

Speaking to a global media in Tokyo this week, Brady launched many questions about the entry level of AI robots and even the hope of replacing talented jobs.

“Any work that requires common sense, reasoning, problem solving, thinking at a higher level… He said that these works will always be needed,” he said.

Camera iconAmazon Robotics Chief Technology Specialist Tye Brady said that he did not foresee a future in which human-human-human interactions and common sense can be changed. Given Credit: Given

“These things will always be there.

“The idea that there are people against machines’ is the wrong mentality.”

According to Forbes’ recent rankings, Amazon is the fifth largest company in the world.

In Australia, the company employs approximately 7000 people – plus contractor – in 15 business lines.

However, there is logistics and storage in the business world and the company’s modern warehouses are strengthened by robot fleets.

Blue boots buzz along the storage floor, sliding under the piles of yellow plastic shelves, carrying numerous products to human workers for sorting, storage and packaging.

Japan shows the future for highly robotized Australia Amazon warehouses

Despite only one of the eight Australian warehouses operating AI robots, more than 200 million physical physicals are available in Amazon in Australia.

With the global march of the company’s automation, questions about how many people will work in the gigantic warehouses of Amazon in the coming decades and the entry -level works will not be eliminated.

Braz We built the world’s largest mobile industrial robot base, Brad said Brady.

“Practical, they solve daily problems. These are real world, applied problems… 99 percent are not good enough. We send billions and billions of packages every year,” he said.

The center of Amazon's Chiba Minato warehouse in Tokyo is a sea of ​​products that are carried by millimeter. Picture: Newswire / Blair Jackson
Camera iconThe center of Amazon’s Chiba Minato warehouse in Tokyo is a sea of ​​products that are carried by millimeter. Newswire / Blair Jackson Credit: News Corp Australia

A graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Brady learned to program computers in the 1970s. As the technology progresses, he traveled to the United States to be in various information processing centers and is now pioneering Amazon’s in -house robot section.

Orum I want to re -frame your mentality with machines orum I see a future where smart, physical AI systems help the elderly. I see systems where caregivers can use elevators to help people get out of bed.

Orum I see systems where people can stay at home longer. I see robotic systems that make them more human. Robotics that expand and strengthen human potential. ”

*Amazon paid in Japan for Newswire’s travel and accommodation

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