AI-powered delivery robots from companies like Serve Robotics are replacing human drivers across the nation — but they can’t do it without help.
Making robots more human may turn out to be a costly mistake, not because the technology fails, but because it ignores the people it's meant to help.
Aside from safety and privacy, job security is a major concern among most people as generative AI advances and scales greater heights. Over the past few years, the technology has rapidly gained ...
Last year, when The New York Times reported that Amazon’s robotics team’s ultimate goal was to automate 75% of the company’s operations, replacing more than half a million human jobs in an attempt to ...
It’s hard to think of any other company that has shaped the labor market as much as Amazon has over the past two decades. Now, internal documents and interviews obtained by the New York Times point to ...
Facepalm: Amazon has responded to reports that the company aims to replace 600,000 US warehouse workers with robots by 2033. Predictably, it's trying to put a positive spin on the news, claiming that ...
eSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly ...
Amid the excitement over the humanoid performers at the Spring Festival Gala, it must be remembered that robotic advances should complement human welfare Robots have taken another step closer to ...
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