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(Image credit: Ocado)

Ocado Smart Platform

(Image credit: Ocado)

Anyway, the reason I mention this is that Ocado, the online shopping service provider that works with grocery retailers to deliver their wares, has just updated its robots. What it’s come up with involves one robot that scurries around on little wheels and looks like it would really struggle to get up stairs, and another one that is equipped with, yes, a suction cup on a telescopic arm. But far from being laughably inadequate,thisrobot plunger arm could revolutionise how your online groceries reach you.

Behold the magic at work. There’s another video at the bottom, showing the bots packing crates. Pretty cool, if you like that sort of thing.

Even more impressive than the 600 Series, however, is the Robotic Pick. There are already plenty of robots that can scurry around with a backpack full of online shopping items. However, they have all previously needed humans to a significant degree when it comes to loading and unloading them. That’s because robots are stupid and clumsy, and just because you’ve taught them to pick up avocados without bruising them, doesn’t mean they’ll be able to grab a coconut or a large packet of toilet roll.

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Ocado is extremely proud of the Robotic Pick. Its little suction cup ‘hand’ is able to pick and pack ‘tens of thousands of products of varying shapes, sizes, weights, and fragility’. It’s been developed via a combination of ‘machine vision, deep reinforcement learning and advanced sensing’.

The Robotic Pick will handle thousands of objects of different shapes and sizes(Image credit: Ocado)

Ocado Smart Platform

The Robotic Pick will handle thousands of objects of different shapes and sizes

The Robotic Pick will handle thousands of objects of different shapes and sizes

(Image credit: Ocado)

Ocado says the 600 Series bot is ‘the world’s lightest and most efficient grocery fulfilment bot’. More than half of its parts are 3D printed, making it cheaper to build and operate than its predecessor as well as being ‘ultra-energy efficient and high performing.’

Both the 600 Series and the grid it zooms around on are significantly lighter and faster to build  than what was previously possible, meaning the Ocado Smart Platform can be installed in buildings that are simpler, cheaper and smaller. This is potentially extremely significant, making the last leg of the groceries' journey – ie: to your house – much simpler and more cost effective.

The less energy-guzzling 600 Series bots also mean new sites will require ‘less chill equipment.’ I don’t really know what that means; I just thought it was a funny phrase.

The 600 Series robot. All very clever, but let’s see it chase us up some stairs, eh?(Image credit: Ocado)

Ocado Smart Platform

The 600 Series robot. All very clever, but let’s see it chase us up some stairs, eh?

The 600 Series robot. All very clever, but let’s see it chase us up some stairs, eh?

(Image credit: Ocado)

The robots are the sexy part of Ocado’s Smart Platform, clearly. However perhaps the cleverest part of all this is that the increased automation facilitates Ocado Orbit, ‘the world’s first Virtual Distribution Centre.’ Putting it as simply as I can, this means good can be delivered straight to a network of ‘fulfilment centres’ – normally the last leg of your groceries' journey from manufacturer to you – without having to go through a warehouse beforehand.

Ocado explains that, ‘Manufacturers only find this cost-effective when they can deliver products in sufficiently large quantities,’ so such centres have to be large.  Ocado Orbit, however, uses ‘AI and Machine Learning, in a seamless supply ecosystem.’

Okay, so this is also a bit reminiscent of Dr Who, where seemingly insurmountable problems are waved away via science that most people find incomprehensible. But in this case, Ocado is saying that AI and machine learning mean you can have a larger number of smaller warehouses that are nearer to where you live. Crucially, this will workwithoutlosing the full, supermarket-sized range of groceries, which used to require much larger warehouses. So large range; short lead times; better value. Who doesn’t want that?

This all sounds extremely exciting. Self-driving trucks and vans don’t seem far off now, so an almost entirely automated shopping-delivery system could be within our grasp very soon. It’s worth pointing out that last year, Ocado experienced a serious fire after three of its robots collided – something that even the most inept human employees are unlikely to do.

So while I won’t gettoocarried away with possible visions of the future of shopping just yet, there’s no doubt that Ocado Smart Platform is seriously exciting – which is more than can be said of most Dr Who episodes these days.

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