the decline in it's labor population,
due to various factors labour shortage is one of the biggest threats to businesses operating in Japan, with this in mind major convenience store chain Family Mart, has recently teamed up with Tokyo-based robotics company Telexistence to introduce AI-powered robots in hundreds of its stores across the country, called TX SCARA – short for Selective Compliance Assembly Robot Arm – Telexistence’s new robot is powered by Nvidia’s Jetson AI platform to process information and uses Microsoft’s Azure cloud infrastructure to record and reference sales data to optimize its tasks,
apparently, the new shelf-stocking robots can work without any human assistance 98% of the time; the other 2% of the time, they can be controlled remotely by humans, using virtual reality headsets when needed, Telexistence will receive a monthly fee for the robots’ work, their maintenance, and the support of remote human workers when they are needed, TX SCARA robots are being introduced in about 300 Family Mart stores across Japan, but this is only the beginning, if they prove as useful as Telexistence expects them to be, there are plans to have them rolled out in the company’s 16,000 Japanese stores,
Japan is only the beginning as far as shelf stacking robots are concerned, Telexistence and Microsoft have both announced plans to expand into the US convenience store market, as well as other foreign markets, “Telexistence’s robots will become a powerful influence, providing a virtually inexhaustible supply of new labor,” Telexistence CEO, Jin Tomioka, said. “The new surplus resources will be appropriately redistributed through market mechanisms, and in the long run, this can lead to the transition of human society to be significantly augmented by automated labor", I guess if you stack shelves, start to learn how to be the robots virtual manager, if you want to keep your job!
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