Amazon's Delivery Drivers Will Soon Wear AI Smart Glasses
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Amazon hopes robots can replace 600K future hires
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Amazon is launching a new AI-powered tool that’s supposed to help you choose which product to buy. Now, when you look at multiple similar items on Amazon’s app or mobile website, it may display a “Help me decide” button that picks one for you based on your browsing activity, searches, shopping history, and preferences.
One of the top tech analysts on Wall Street says other cloud providers are doing better in the generative AI era.
Amazon, which has asserted its dominance in retail and the tech industry with its cloud computing services, has turned heads this year with dramatic workforce changes as it invests billions into artificial intelligence.
In one post, Amazon highlighted Blue Jay, a robot it calls “an extra set of hands that helps employees with tasks that involve reaching and lifting,” and its agentic AI system Project Eluna, which “acts like an extra teammate, helping reduce that cognitive load” while optimizing sorting to reduce bottlenecks.
Amazon Web Services struggles to find AI solopreneurs and bootstrapped startups, highlighting a blind spot in its customer discovery process.
Amazon is set to counter recent investor concerns about its position in the AI race, analyst Justin Post wrote.
Amazon's AI systems and advanced technology will create a "safe, more productive" environment for employees as the e-commerce giant plans to avoid hiring 600,000 workers by 2033.
AWS staff warned that AI startups are delaying cloud spending in favor of AI models and tools, according to one of the documents earlier this year.