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Amazon Patents A Wristband That Can Track Workers' Movement

Accepted submission by Arthur T Knacerbracket at 2018-02-01 14:32:12
Techonomics

Story automatically generated by StoryBot Version 0.3.0a (Development).
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FeedSource: [CNET] collected from rss-bot logs

Time: 2018-02-01 11:26:34 UTC

Original URL: https://www.cnet.com/news/amazon-patents-a-wristband-that-would-track-worker-movements/#ftag=CAD590a51e [cnet.com] using UTF-8 encoding.

Title: Amazon Patents A Wristband That Can Track Workers' Movement - Cnet

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Amazon Patents A Wristband That Can Track Workers' Movement - Cnet

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story [cnet.com]:

Staff at Amazon's warehouse in Piacenza in Northern Italy preparing for Black Friday.

The company has patented designs for a wristband that would track where its workers put their hands in relation to inventory bins and give "haptic feedback" to signal if they have the right bin to retrieve an item or not. The patent documents were first spotted by GeekWire. [geekwire.com]

The "ultrasonic bracelet", supposed to be a time- and labour-saving device, would work by periodically emitting ultrasonic sound pulses [sqoop.com] to a receiver, tracking which bin a worker is reaching for and monitoring how efficiently they fulfill orders. The wristband would also send and receive radio transmissions [sqoop.com], pinning a worker's location and giving a burst of "haptic feedback", a vibration similar to those found in phones [soylentnews.org] or game controllers, which would tell the employee if they're reaching for the right bin or not.

The approach would eliminate the need for extra time-consuming acts, "such as pushing a button associated with the inventory bin or scanning a barcode associated with the inventory bin," one patent's description reads [google.com].

The idea of being tracked by their bosses might not sit well with Amazon workers, 500 of whom went on strike last November on Black Friday [soylentnews.org] at Italy's main distribution hub after disappointing talks over pay. Six warehouses in Germany saw strikes on the same day.

Amazon has already embraced faster employees in the form of worker robots [soylentnews.org] and delivery drones [soylentnews.org], as well as no employees at all with its Amazon Go [soylentnews.org], a convenience store that does away with cashiers.


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