Let the inventory walk and talk | Mick Mountz | TEDxBoston

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  • čas přidán 27. 07. 2024
  • "These things can scale to gianormous!"
    Mick Mountz revolutionized the way warehouses pack and ship their inventory by using robots, mobile shelving, and algorithms based on complexity theory. What used to take hours of tedious tasks is transformed into fun, 15-minute, click-to-ship order processing.Mick Mountz revolutionized the way warehouses pack and ship their inventory by using robots, mobile shelving, and algorithms based on complexity theory. What used to take hours of tedious tasks is transformed into fun, 15-minute, click-to-ship order processing.
    In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 47

  • @toddsherman
    @toddsherman Před 11 lety +2

    Boxing items of different shapes and sizes and including packing material for shipment is a very complex task to automate. Advanced computer vision and nimble robotic arms will likely enable it to happen somewhat soon.

  • @andy4an
    @andy4an Před 10 lety +1

    Wonderful!
    The perfect fusion of exciting robotics with increased job satisfaction.

  • @boukeversteegh
    @boukeversteegh Před 11 lety +2

    The reason is the products are different sizes and shapes, and their position is not precisely known. This means packing robots need to use computer vision to find the objects and know how to pick them up. Finally they need to be fit in the box very precisely. Think about how soft vs. hard objects should be packed. Watch a few videos of robots (?v=c3Cq0sy4TBs) picking up stuff and you'll see how slow it really is. There are fast pickers (flex picker), but they can only pick up 1 kind of object.

  • @TerryE-UK
    @TerryE-UK Před 12 lety

    Did my first project on pick automation in this sector 35 years ago. An excellent piece of lateral thinking and innovation. I like it :)

  • @rewby22
    @rewby22 Před 12 lety +1

    I enjoyed this topic, and Nick's presentation of it, a great deal.

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety +1

    @sadjesture
    An algorithm can easily be created for the packaging of goods in the most efficient way.
    You could, for instance divide the items into cathegories: cans and metal containers, glass, plastic, fruit and vegetables (by their bar code, perhaps) and them pack them so that the heaviest/most resistent items are on the bottom and the most fragile on top. As for the volume it's a simple matter of feeding the robot info about the size of each item in respect to the box.

  • @kingofbrooklin
    @kingofbrooklin Před 12 lety

    Holy crap, did TED really change the intro music? THANK YOU!!!

  • @madbr3991
    @madbr3991 Před 12 lety

    @zanycaswell some go to charging stations. but some of the new ones are using induction charging from the floor.

  • @TbiRobotics
    @TbiRobotics Před 11 lety

    Very good!

  • @bakasheru
    @bakasheru Před 12 lety +1

    @TheUnchainedMind
    Why does everyone always assume that during shipping the top of the box stays up?

  • @HiAdrian
    @HiAdrian Před 12 lety

    Good talk, interesting :)

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 11 lety

    I would argue that having standard size boxes and engeneering robot arms that can manage all of them is actually quite easy. Technology has accoplished far more complex things already.

  • @boukeversteegh
    @boukeversteegh Před 11 lety

    Sure you are right about that, but I think if all products need to be put in standard sized boxes you'd lose a lot of valuable space in your parcel. I'd say most products are not box shaped. Shipping costs would be much higher. On the other hand, you do save on labor cost, so I don't know which way is cheaper.

  • @madbr3991
    @madbr3991 Před 12 lety

    @TheUnchainedMind not what i meant by adapt and be creative. yes we could create a system where all the tasks are done by robots. packing 3d objects into boxes would be easy for a computer that's just math. but what happens when an unexpected instance shows up. a human could adapt and overcome that but a computer might not be able to. humans and machines work better together then they do separately. besides the more machines you have the more people you need to fix them.

  • @zakiya2925
    @zakiya2925 Před 3 lety

    Love this! Living in a third world country we are nowhere close to this. I really need a new job!

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety +2

    Once the machine is build, or bought, then it will more than pay its cost, whatever that is.

  • @alekcurless3149
    @alekcurless3149 Před 11 lety +2

    Why does he say "goo"?

  • @capitalistdingo
    @capitalistdingo Před 13 lety

    The workers still stand, reach, turn and move. They probably get more exercise than many desk jockey. I say this as a former desk Jockey myself ;-)

  • @666alberto
    @666alberto Před 12 lety +1

    Yea AMAZing, anyway could be implemented also the "scan" isn't it?
    (and also the packaging but maybe that is really $ because of 3xzy robot placing..
    anyway what a slowness by the pickers0_o!

  • @MarceloCornejoSalas
    @MarceloCornejoSalas Před měsícem

    No está en español..??

  • @mecon2
    @mecon2 Před 12 lety

    How do you charge all 10,000 - 1,000,000 robots? :S

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety

    @madbr3991
    Yes, you would need one guy, maybe 2 or three, to supervise the place. What is better/more convenient ? Having thousands of people who monotonously pack stuff non stop or having a much lower number of technical experts who repair the machines when they break down ?

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety

    @bakasheru
    If it's food they're transporting then I'm quite sure they'll be carefull with the way they do it.
    And if you're implying that the boxes are put at random and flip around then all the better reason not to have human beings, because their efforts would ammount to nothing, just like the robot's.

  • @MichaelBracewell
    @MichaelBracewell Před 12 lety

    @mecon2 They probably drive themselves to charging stations when they get low

  • @spunkbass
    @spunkbass Před 12 lety +3

    i would love if someone got dropped in the middle of the moving shelves. Would make a great 2d arcade game simulation.

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety

    @EdgarGG89
    Thank you for the reply, all-knowing being.
    Care to grace us with a reason for such a firm answer ?

  • @Pianofy
    @Pianofy Před 11 lety +1

    People talk about unemployment as if it's a bad thing. It is not: it is awesome. It frees up our time to do better things.

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety

    @madbr3991
    You underestimate our technology.
    A supercomputer called Deep Blue who beat Garry Kasparov in 1997 could evaluate 200 million positions per second. Today, with better algorithms, the same can be obtained with a regular PC, and it only needs to evaluate 8 million positions per second. I'm pretty sure a PC could figure out how to best fit a couple of tens of boxes in a truck if it can win against a grandmaster ;)

  • @crazycutz8072
    @crazycutz8072 Před 10 lety +1

    job satisfaction = les people working.. happy boss..

  • @capitalistdingo
    @capitalistdingo Před 13 lety

    Eventually the pick-pack worker will be replaced with a robot just as few jobs exist for horse-pulled carriage makers. Our kids may grow up deprived of the option of working as a pick-pack worker but whatever job they do will probably only exist because of systems like this.

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety

    @dreamer98
    Once you know how to build the robot you can just make hundreds or thousands of them.
    Even if the system cost ten million dollars to build, which is very unlikely, it would still be worth it because it just works tirelessly for as long as it is mantained, and it will outperform the minimum wage worker in terms of speed. If you sum up those wages, eventually it adds up to more than the system, it's inevitable.
    It would be a good investment.

  • @GuillaumeSanfacon
    @GuillaumeSanfacon Před 12 lety

    I was waiting for the moment He will start playing keyboard and djembe... :(

  • @MrIansmitchell
    @MrIansmitchell Před 12 lety +1

    Because people are cheaper.

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety +1

    Wrong. Whatever the cost of the machinery is, it will always be absorbed over time, since the cost of salaries is vastly superior to that of electricity and some maintenance now and then.

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety

    I don't really see why human beings are involved at all in the packaging of these goods.
    Couldn't a system of conveyor belts do the job even faster and at no cost other than that of the electricity used ?

  • @tetronimike
    @tetronimike Před 12 lety +1

    lol, CZcams comment arguments XD

  • @babalolaseyi3119
    @babalolaseyi3119 Před 8 měsíci

    How many people is this tech going to put out of their jobs? Efficiency that threatens the people it is meant to serve is risky to the said people and should be checked.
    Great idea though.

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety

    @dreamer98
    I'm sorry, but what is with this idiotic response ?
    We were talking about how convenient a packaging method this was, it has nothing to do with me. Why do you feel that you must come to ad hominem attacks ?

  • @MichaelBracewell
    @MichaelBracewell Před 12 lety

    @criverock if automation really caused unemployment the economy would have crashed a long time before now

  • @TheUnchainedMind
    @TheUnchainedMind Před 12 lety

    @dreamer98
    Ok, dreamer boy, I accept your withdrawal.
    Have a good day :)

  • @Fingolfin3423
    @Fingolfin3423 Před 3 lety +1

    Back when TED talks were actually good and about real technology, education, and design. Nowadays there's a lot of woke, useless information.

  • @karenbrackett8330
    @karenbrackett8330 Před 4 měsíci

    This explains exactly why slavery was popular

  • @criverock
    @criverock Před 12 lety

    leaving workers at home and you will sell less goods! and so on until the economic system collapse under its own gravity! but that's good! thanks god capitalism has this profound contradiction and we will be forced to move into another type of economy! maybe where we are not manipulated to buy stuff we don't need! but rather save production for efficiency sustainability and abundance! have you ever heard about technological unemployment and resource based economy???

  • @Michirobin
    @Michirobin Před 12 lety

    Gay