Warehouse automation is booming. Fueled by the success of e-commerce, projections indicate the market is expected to surpass $54 billion by 2030, led by the rise of autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) ...
At an Amazon warehouse in Louisiana, Robin lifts and sorts packages. Hercules moves pods full of goods. Sequoia retrieves items to pick and pack for online orders. These aren’t the names of Amazon ...
Warehouse automation is no longer a differentiator—it is a prerequisite for operating at scale. Rising labor costs, volatile demand patterns, tighter delivery expectations, and increasing SKU ...
In simple terms, warehouse automation solutions, such as autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), carry out tasks that are labor-intensive, prone to error, and don’t require constant oversight from human ...
Robots-to-goods has the potential to become the future of warehouse automation, as a technology set to define the category.