Who's automating the automators? The post Amazon Staffers Learning Hard Lesson as Company Cuts Robotics Jobs appeared first ...
When Amazon expands, it often does so at a scale that reshapes entire industries. So when Amazon Robotics job cuts ...
The layoffs are separate from Amazon's broader cuts announced in January that impacted more than 16,000 corporate workers.
Amazon cut at least 100 positions in its robotics unit, continuing a sweeping corporate downsizing tied to artificial intelligence efficiencies and cost controls.
Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) has reportedly discontinued its recently introduced warehouse robot, Blue Jay, and reassigned its staff to other robotics projects. The operations of the robotic system ...
Amazon has laid off over 100 employees in its robotics division as it restructures warehouse automation efforts, shelves the ...
An Amazon spokesperson described the affected roles as a "relatively small number," confirming that affected employees would receive severance pay, continued health insurance coverage, and assistance ...
Amazon's e-commerce operations rely on thousands of robots to automate warehouse operations. Still, this division hasn't avoided job cuts.
Amazon has laid off more than 100 employees from its robotics division as part of an ongoing effort to streamline operations ...
Just months after calling Blue Jay a core warehouse technology, the company shelved it as part of a broader shift in how its ...
Amazon Robotics grounded the Blue Jay project after only six months, redirecting resources to other fulfillment projects.
Amazon quietly ended its Blue Jay warehouse robot program just months after unveiling the multi-armed ceiling-mounted system designed to speed same-day deliveries in October.