OLD Media News

Walmart scraps robotics plan

Walmart has ended a plan to replace human workers with robots in a bid to automate some tasks at its stores.

The Wall Street Journal’s Sara Nassauer reported the news:

Walmart Inc. WMT 1.19% has ended its effort to use roving robots in store aisles to keep track of its inventory, reversing a yearslong push to automate the task with the hulking machines after finding during the coronavirus pandemic that humans can help get similar results.

The retail giant has ended its contract with robotics company Bossa Nova Robotics Inc., with which it joined over the past five years to gradually add six-foot-tall inventory-scanning machines to stores. Walmart had made the robots a frequent topic of conversation at media and investor events in recent years, hoping the technology could help reduce labor costs and increase sales by making sure products are kept in stock.

The AP reported:

Walmart said in a statement it has “worked with Bossa Nova for five years and together we learned a lot about how technology can assist associates, make jobs easier and provide a better customer experience.” It said it is still testing other new technologies for tracking inventory and moving goods.

Brian Heater and Kirsten Korosec from TechCrunch noted:

Bossa Nova co-founder Sarjoun Skaff didn’t confirm nor deny the WSJ report, instead issuing a no comment. He did, however, weigh in on the COVID-19 pandemic and its effect on the company, seeming to confirm that some layoffs had indeed occurred.

“I cannot comment on Walmart, however, the pandemic has forced us to streamline our operations and focus on our core technologies,” Skaff said. “We have made stunning advances in AI and robotics. Our retail AI is the industry’s best and works as well on robots as with fixed cameras, and our hardware, autonomy and operations excelled in more than 500 of the world’s most challenging stores. With the board’s full support, we continue deploying this technology with our partners in retail and in other fields.”

Irina Slav

View Comments

  • In my opinion, robots can never completely replace human work. There is always a human factor that must be present, then how some situations can be scrolled in different ways, and the technique will have one logic, according to which he will solve a problem or task. And the introduction of robots will significantly reduce jobs, which will have a very bad effect on humanity as a whole.

Recent Posts

Banking Times acquires The New Fiver

Banking Times has acquired the domain name "The New Fiver" for an undisclosed amount, aiming…

13 hours ago

Canadian Press hires Duggan as a reporter

The Canadian Press has hired Kyle Duggan as a reporter. Duggan has been an Ottawa-based reporter for…

19 hours ago

Bloomberg Media launches Bloomberg Live Q&A

Bloomberg Media is starting a new service called Bloomberg Live Q&A, an audio-based platform that…

19 hours ago

Miao to cover China economy for WSJ

Wall Street Journal reporter Hannah Miao is moving to Singapore to cover the China economy.…

2 days ago

FT taps Foy to cover European banking

Financial Times reporter Simon Foy is now covering European banks. He has been covering accounting for the…

2 days ago

Debtwire seeks a private credit reporter

Debtwire, the leading provider of global fixed income news, analysis and data for more than…

2 days ago