Kindle Deals Aren't My Beat, But Amazon Prime Day Has Me Thinking About Warehouse Floors
Bob Macintosh went looking for robotics news and ended up staring at Kindle deals. It happens. Here's what's actually worth your attention this week.
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Picture a Tuesday morning, coffee going cold, three browser tabs open and none of them with anything useful about conveyor systems or AMR deployments. That's basically how this week started for me.
I'll be honest: the sources I was handed for this one are about Kindles. ZDNet is running Prime Day coverage, the base model Kindle is under a hundred dollars, and apparently that's news. Good for readers, I suppose. Not exactly my wheelhouse.
But look, here's the thing. I spent 12 years at Kuka watching the industry press get distracted by shiny consumer gadgets while the real story was happening on factory floors in Augsburg and Greenville and Sunderland. And I'd be lying if I said that dynamic has changed much.
What This Actually Has To Do With Warehouses
Amazon sells Kindles. Amazon also runs one of the largest warehouse robotics operations on the planet, somewhere north of 750,000 robots deployed across its fulfilment network by recent estimates (though the company has never been precise about current figures). The gap between those two facts is worth sitting with for a moment.
The same company discounting a reading device for $99 during a summer sale event is also the company that has done more to normalise high-density robot deployment in logistics than anyone else in the last decade. More than any single systems integrator. More, honestly, than most of the robot manufacturers I spent my career working alongside.
When I was at Kuka, we used to talk about Amazon the way you talk about weather. Something you plan around, not something you control. They were building their own material handling solutions, buying Kiva Systems back in 2012, and basically deciding they didn't need to wait for the rest of the industry to catch up. Twelve years later, that bet looks pretty good from their side of the ledger.
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