Walmart's Shelf Scanning Robots - podcast episode cover

Walmart's Shelf Scanning Robots

Mar 23, 20185 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

Walmart is expanding the use of robots at its stores with a new fleet of autonomous robots that constantly scan store shelves to identify out of stock items so they can be replenished faster.Watch the video:http://ktla.com/2018/03/23/walmart-uses-robots-to-roam-aisles-looking-for-out-of-stock-items/Follow Rich on Social Media:Facebook: http://facebook.com/RichOnTechTwitter: http://twitter.com/richdemuroInstagram: http://instagram.com/richontechNEW! You can add the Rich on Tech Daily Update to your Alexa Flash Briefing! Just search for the "Rich on Tech" skill in your Alexa app and add it to your briefing! You'll get a daily dose of tech news each day and a longer show on the weekends!

See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Get full access to Rich on Tech at richontech.tv/subscribe

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Robots roaming the aisles at Walmart. Omrich Demiro. This is rich on Tech Daily. Walmart is expanding the use of robots at its stores. It's something we're seeing over and over with a lot of different companies. We saw a robot in action at their Burbank, California store. It's a robot from a company called Boston Nova Robotics. They're based up in San Francisco, and its job is to roam the store and constantly scan the store shelves to look for out of stock items. It's also looking for missing

shelf labels and items that are priced incorrectly. And if you look at the robot, it kind of seems like a big floor cleaner with kind of a giant tower coming out of the top, and it's packed with all kinds of cameras and sensors. There's two D, three D and LDAR, which is similar to what those self driving cars use. And that's important because this robot works its way around the store all by itself and yes, when customers are present, that is the main thing. This doesn't

happen overnight when everyone leaves the store. This happens as customers are in the store, so it can actually identify what's out of stock.

Speaker 2

In near real time. Here's how it works.

Speaker 1

It roams the aisles and it takes photos of every shelf and every aisle as it moves along. It takes a lot of pictures and it stitches them all together, but also has these super bright lights on it, so it kind of bathes the store shelves in these bright lights so it can see everything properly.

Speaker 2

It's kind of weird.

Speaker 1

It looks like a giant wand going across the shelves. Now, all these pictures become giant panoramic pictures that are terabytes of data that's sent to computers to be analyzed. And the idea here is that basically Walmart can identify which items are out of stock and then they kind of check, okay, is that item on its way? Do we have more on the top shelf or do we have more in the back, and then they can restock items faster than ever, and they can also get an idea of real time

stock numbers. They also get a real time idea of how much stock they have, and they can also identify issues with pricing and labels in near real time as well. This all solves several pain points for customers, like how annoying is it when you go to a store in an item you want is stock. So more retailers are letting you check stock online before you go into a store, or even reserve items online.

Speaker 2

To pick up.

Speaker 1

So this could really help out with all of that in the future. Right now, the robots are part of a test pilot, but they can scan an entire store in a day, one hundred and fifty thousand items. They do a bunch of aisles in an hour, but they do need to be recharged after a few hours of work. Now there is the big question, is this replacing humans?

Speaker 2

That's the question I always get from folks.

Speaker 1

Walmart, of course says it's not, but they say it's helping them now. Usually a human worker has to go through and do all of this manually. It's kind of a repetitive process. They go through the aisles, they have one of those kind of scan guns, they check the stock, and they identify the problem areas. But the robot can do all of this much more frequently and it's automatic.

So Walmart says this frees up to humans the associates in their stores to bring the stock to the aisles, put it on the shelves, fix those pricing issues or put those items back in their.

Speaker 2

Place, and also help customers. Now.

Speaker 1

Watching the robot do its work was pretty mesmerizing folks in the store that I was seeing.

Speaker 2

You know, they just have people in the stores.

Speaker 1

They were all taking pictures kind of selfies with the robot, wondering what it's doing. I think Walmart should put some sort of sign somewhere explaining what this robot's doing, because lots of people just think it's cleaning the.

Speaker 2

Floors, but it's doing much more.

Speaker 1

Walmart tested this technology in a few stores in Arkansas, Pennsylvania, and California. Apparently they liked what the robots were doing enough, so they've expanded to fifty stores now, including the location we saw in Burbank. There's also locations in Lancaster, Palmdale, and Santa Clarita using the robots. That's just in the SoCal area, but there's other states as well. If this works out and Walmart sees big benefits from these robots,

this could be a huge rollout. Walmart has over eleven thousand stores, and they know the competition is heating up. There are so many delivery services out there, like Amazon and even Walmart's own in store pickup, which this could be a big benefit for Here's the deal.

Speaker 2

The robots know.

Speaker 1

Exactly where everything is in the store, so Walmart could use that information to lead customers right to specific products faster than ever. They also know when they're in stock. Now keep in mind humans have been doing this forever. When I worked it off as depot many years ago, part of our training was to know where every single product in the store was and in what aisle they were in. So when a customer asked, hey, where are the rubber bands boom, you could tell them which aile

they were in. So I guess in the future we're going to be asking robots where things are.

Speaker 2

I can even see.

Speaker 1

A time in the future when you enter a store, you want an item and a little tiny robot leads you to the exact product you want.

Speaker 2

Wouldn't that be crazy?

Speaker 1

You can see the video of the Walmart robots in action just go to my website rich on tech dot tv. If you like this podcast, please rate and review it in the Apple Podcasts app that way more people can discover it.

Speaker 2

Thanks so much for listening.

Speaker 1

I'm rich Demiro rich on tech dot TV.

Speaker 2

I'll talk to you real soon.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android