Convenience store FamilyMart employs its first robot stocker
ntnn n n
n ntttttttttttt
It’s a problem that has been plaguing the industry for years now. The lucrative convenience store business has expanded to such a degree that the growth of stores is outpacing the available labor. Add in ongoing issues with wages and late hours, and you have all the ingredients for a full-blown labor crisis.
n
The major chains have been flirting with technology to handle the duties once held by people. Cashier-free stores have been slowly emerging to iron out any kinks that may appear before mass adoption, and robots have been called in to do the stocking duty.
n
Last year we saw tests held by convenience chain FamilyMart and robotics firm Telexistence in which a robot avatar called the Model-T was remotely piloted via VR to stock drinks. Perhaps most impressive part was that the robot looked pretty cool – like something from a Tim Burton movie.
n
n
Now, Family Mart and Telexistence have announced that the first such robot has been installed at a FamilyMart on the premises of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry in Tokyo. It was put into active duty on Nov 2 in an unveiling attended by the press.
n
▼ News report on the new robot worker
n
n
As we can see in the video above, the arm automatically refills the display case by grabbing items from the stock shelves directly behind it and sliding them into the correct section.
n
The previous cool robot had a human to control it and monitor which drink went where through a VR interface. However, the TXScara can monitor and identify stock by itself with the aid of an AI named…sigh, Gordon.
n
Photo: FamilyMartn
Reaction online has also been lukewarm, with many pointing out what they see as flaws in the system.
n
“But you still need a person to stock the shelf that the robot is [taking the items from in order to stock the cooler].”
n
“It’s pretty slow. Seems like a person could do it way faster.”
n
“It’s actually amazing, but kind of slow too.”
n
“Are they going to make another robot to open the cardboard boxes and refill the back shelf?”
n
“I used to work at a convenience store and do this. It was actually a nice break to cool down in the summer.”
n
“In the end, it still takes a person to stock the back shelf.”
n
Ultimately many of those complaints seem superficial. Stocking the back shelf would only need to be done as a single job when deliveries arrive rather than constantly keeping up with sold inventory throughout the day. Also, there’s no need for the robot to move fast unless people were buying up drinks at an amazing speed, and it would take some kind of BTS canned coffee for that to happen.
n
FamilyMart reports that the move will be beneficial to the labor shortage as stocking takes up about 20 to 30 percent of a human employee’s workload.
n
Source: NHK News Web, Family Mart, Hachima Kiko
n
Read more stories from SoraNews24.
n
— What’s it like to shop at FamilyMart’s first “unmanned convenience store” in Japan?
n
— Japanese convenience store chain begins testing remote controlled robot staff in Tokyo
n
— Weird Japanese vending machine comes with a heartwarming twist
tttttttntttnttt n External Linkn n n https://soranews24.com/2021/11/04/convenience-store-family-mart-employs-its-first-robot-stocker/nn nntttttttttttt© SoraNews24ntttttttttn
n