Honestly this design is ideal, storage bins not moving makes all the difference, Amazon showed these robots are great but moving the whole shelf full of bins was dumb, I expect to see a lot of these picking robot copy this design.
Next thing will be in floor power contacts so they can get power while moving and shed the battery, 6 volt would be good! Make for a cheaper robot. Shelf arrangement will also matter a lot. Taller and more compact spaces are vital. Metric will be cost/pick. Next they I am guessing different size bins or even boxes, bins cost money to get the install cost down
The Feed bought the system via a Robotics-as-a-Service purchase model, which replace a fixed capex cost with an upfront fee and a monthly rental cost for the system. As you heard Matt say in the video, this enabled them to reduce their total fulfillment costs (i.e. labor + automation) by 60% since installing Brightpick. To answer your second question, the goods are transferred via a decanting process. You can see exactly how it works here: ua-cam.com/video/c0kLWlOH1ko/v-deo.htmlsi=pHskcBin7vDFZori&t=250
@@christopherd.winnan8701 This isn't something we disclose publicly since it is solution-dependent and confidential information, however if you reach out to us individually we will be gladly to share it with you: brightpick.ai/contact-us/
@@jankmetko9407 for a system like this and a Robots as a Service pricing model, you're looking at a cost per pick of around 5-6 cents per pick (excluding ancillary costs outside the robotics)
So happy you guys are saving braincells because that kind of work turns anyone into a zombie. I remember when i was supposed to start working at "kruidvat" picking warehouse, and they gave me a headset and a scanner. I needed to go to walk to the first pick and scan a barcode, then the headset gave me the green light, it then provided me with the next location etc etc. After 1.5 hours my brain went into no way mode and i walked back to the chief, said: im not going to tell a computer system that its ok for it to tell me where to move to 😂 Because then im simply waiting for it as its waiting for me. They did not understand what i meant so yeah i walked out and never returned. Good job on the automation guys, this is the way.
Where was the AI tech shown? I’m still waiting to see the impressive Artificial Intelligence. I’m seeing pre programmed robots working in pre determined and positioned lines at the press of a button.
The robots use AI to identify which objects to pick, meaning the robots do not need to be pretrained and can pick any items automatically out-of-the-box. The also use AI in the navigation; while the paths are pre-planned, there are no navigation markers or QR codes and the robots entirely rely on their vision for navigation (which is in part enabled by AI).
@@brightpickAIOkay, I see now for the box picking. Although for navigation are all the robots connected to one another to know their positions or are they using AI to avoid one another?
@@thlightest9827 all robots are connected to a central server via a local WIFi network. The entire fleet is managed by Brightpick Intuition software, which plans all the paths and assigns tasks to each robot in such a way that minimizes overlaps / traffic. In addition, each robot also has collision avoidance built in as a second safety measure and the robots do communicate with each other directly when they are close.
That is amazing But I gess picking items one by one is slower as i can see in this video I recommend you should use some kind of weight measuring Which can pick multiple small items instantly by measuring there weight All thought I believe someone must have already thought about that
in our case, whenever there are more than 5 items that need to be picked at once, the robots automatically take them to a Goods-to-Person station for that exact reason (a human can pick them in bulk much faster than the robot)
@@brightpickAI Thank you for the clarification, but doesn't sending items to a Goods-to-Person station for such task then it kind of defeat the purpose of using robots in the first place? If humans are ultimately needed to handle bulk picking for efficiency, it feels like the automation could be improved. Shouldn't the goal be to optimize the robots to handle multiple items efficiently on their own, rather than relying on manual intervention? That way, you could truly maximize the benefits of automation in the picking process.
@@prakashrollno5499 inevitably there will be some items the robots can't pick on their own, no matter how good the robots are (for example, if the packaging is damaged or the item is too heavy). That's why you need G2P stations as a fallback regardless. This doesn't defeat the purpose because the majority of the picks are handled by the robots, which means instead of e.g. 6 G2P stations you only need 1. It's also a question of cost vs benefit; in theory it may be possible to upgrade the robot, but if it costs you 5x to do that just to save 1 G2P station, then the cost-benefit / ROI isn't there.
Robots just focus on it's task. No politics, no bad mouthing, no medical leaves, no toilet break, no union, no part time foreign students. And the rich gets richer, poor gets poorer
Do you really want to do manual labor that can robot can do easy that do not take much thought or eventually level up to something you can do better with your time?
@codecaine It's a 50/50 . I get that robots are good for the owner of the company and I agree that robots can free up time but when I see so much joblessness and people suffering under poverty ,I side with people more than I do for machines .
@@jonerasmus9399 Life is about changes. We don't have as many coal plants etc... Eventually we will have in evolve. Eventually I don't think anyone should spend the majority time working for people.
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Amazing I been thinking about this for decades, very smart that the picking returns the bin in the same spot! Love it.
Honestly this design is ideal, storage bins not moving makes all the difference, Amazon showed these robots are great but moving the whole shelf full of bins was dumb, I expect to see a lot of these picking robot copy this design.
Agreed. Much more efficient.
Holy Moly! That's amazing!
2:29 I had a warehouse job back in the day -- this seems more elegant than back in the day
This is the absolute best solution I have ever seen
Replacing people with machines is awesome!
Next thing will be in floor power contacts so they can get power while moving and shed the battery, 6 volt would be good! Make for a cheaper robot. Shelf arrangement will also matter a lot. Taller and more compact spaces are vital. Metric will be cost/pick. Next they I am guessing different size bins or even boxes, bins cost money to get the install cost down
This is really cool to see how my order of 'one of each' gel gets picked. 🤣 Very cool!
The door on that building looks like it’s mouth!
Idk if I’d want to walk in there…
Actually really cool!
i love each name of each robot !!!
It would be more impressive if we knew the costs.
Also, how do you transfer from the palletised high bay to the picking boxes?
The Feed bought the system via a Robotics-as-a-Service purchase model, which replace a fixed capex cost with an upfront fee and a monthly rental cost for the system. As you heard Matt say in the video, this enabled them to reduce their total fulfillment costs (i.e. labor + automation) by 60% since installing Brightpick.
To answer your second question, the goods are transferred via a decanting process. You can see exactly how it works here: ua-cam.com/video/c0kLWlOH1ko/v-deo.htmlsi=pHskcBin7vDFZori&t=250
@@brightpickAI = Why not just tell us the fee and rental costs up front?
@@christopherd.winnan8701 This isn't something we disclose publicly since it is solution-dependent and confidential information, however if you reach out to us individually we will be gladly to share it with you: brightpick.ai/contact-us/
You could at least say what is an approximate cost per pick range for such automated systems in general.
@@jankmetko9407 for a system like this and a Robots as a Service pricing model, you're looking at a cost per pick of around 5-6 cents per pick (excluding ancillary costs outside the robotics)
So happy you guys are saving braincells because that kind of work turns anyone into a zombie.
I remember when i was supposed to start working at "kruidvat" picking warehouse, and they gave me a headset and a scanner.
I needed to go to walk to the first pick and scan a barcode, then the headset gave me the green light, it then provided me with the next location etc etc.
After 1.5 hours my brain went into no way mode and i walked back to the chief, said: im not going to tell a computer system that its ok for it to tell me where to move to 😂
Because then im simply waiting for it as its waiting for me.
They did not understand what i meant so yeah i walked out and never returned.
Good job on the automation guys, this is the way.
Maximum staff utilization ❤ lol
If this doesn’t show the future of warehouse work, people who work in warehouse should really see what happens as i feel jobs will be lost
Can be used in pharma warehouses as well
0:23 why does that background look like cgi? 😂
that's the result of using a wide aperture with a low f-stop, which creates a natural bokeh effect in the background
Advanced it's not. It's practically all rails like organization.
the world in a box
And so it begins...
The movie Terminator showed us our fate 30 years ago.
…. But one firmware update and you’re done!😂
Where was the AI tech shown? I’m still waiting to see the impressive Artificial Intelligence. I’m seeing pre programmed robots working in pre determined and positioned lines at the press of a button.
The robots use AI to identify which objects to pick, meaning the robots do not need to be pretrained and can pick any items automatically out-of-the-box.
The also use AI in the navigation; while the paths are pre-planned, there are no navigation markers or QR codes and the robots entirely rely on their vision for navigation (which is in part enabled by AI).
@@brightpickAIOkay, I see now for the box picking. Although for navigation are all the robots connected to one another to know their positions or are they using AI to avoid one another?
@@thlightest9827 all robots are connected to a central server via a local WIFi network. The entire fleet is managed by Brightpick Intuition software, which plans all the paths and assigns tasks to each robot in such a way that minimizes overlaps / traffic. In addition, each robot also has collision avoidance built in as a second safety measure and the robots do communicate with each other directly when they are close.
That is amazing
But I gess picking items one by one is slower as i can see in this video
I recommend you should use some kind of weight measuring
Which can pick multiple small items instantly by measuring there weight
All thought I believe someone must have already thought about that
in our case, whenever there are more than 5 items that need to be picked at once, the robots automatically take them to a Goods-to-Person station for that exact reason (a human can pick them in bulk much faster than the robot)
@@brightpickAI Thank you for the clarification, but doesn't sending items to a Goods-to-Person station for such task then it kind of defeat the purpose of using robots in the first place? If humans are ultimately needed to handle bulk picking for efficiency, it feels like the automation could be improved. Shouldn't the goal be to optimize the robots to handle multiple items efficiently on their own, rather than relying on manual intervention? That way, you could truly maximize the benefits of automation in the picking process.
@@prakashrollno5499 inevitably there will be some items the robots can't pick on their own, no matter how good the robots are (for example, if the packaging is damaged or the item is too heavy). That's why you need G2P stations as a fallback regardless. This doesn't defeat the purpose because the majority of the picks are handled by the robots, which means instead of e.g. 6 G2P stations you only need 1. It's also a question of cost vs benefit; in theory it may be possible to upgrade the robot, but if it costs you 5x to do that just to save 1 G2P station, then the cost-benefit / ROI isn't there.
Wish our US ports had a system like this 😂
Oh snap
The future is here
If in California, those machines will CERTAINLY require union representation.
م 2:43
💖💖💖
Robots just focus on it's task. No politics, no bad mouthing, no medical leaves, no toilet break, no union, no part time foreign students. And the rich gets richer, poor gets poorer
dope
0:12 Why does he sound like Donald Trump?
🤖👌
Ai is not a roobics....
robotics is something different than Ai.... Robotics is a part from Ai
amazing
👍👍👍👍
Robots replacing humans .
Do you really want to do manual labor that can robot can do easy that do not take much thought or eventually level up to something you can do better with your time?
@codecaine It's a 50/50 . I get that robots are good for the owner of the company and I agree that robots can free up time but when I see so much joblessness and people suffering under poverty ,I side with people more than I do for machines .
@@jonerasmus9399 Life is about changes. We don't have as many coal plants etc... Eventually we will have in evolve. Eventually I don't think anyone should spend the majority time working for people.
It reduces workplace injuries due to repetitive action
They don’t realize that they are basically scripting there own demise, because if no one is working who’s going to buy your shit.
so 100 people lost their jobs
I didn't see the safety control measure.
Keep going western countries
Amazing! Look at how effective they became at not hiring Americans! Great job…. Not
Very inefficient compared to autostore
no people no future
By far not the most advanced warehouse. Also poor design.
Maybe the most advanced one that wants to make people think they are the most advanced.
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