Current:Home > ScamsAmazon is using AI to deliver packages faster than ever this holiday season -FinanceAcademy
Amazon is using AI to deliver packages faster than ever this holiday season
View
Date:2025-04-15 10:31:34
With the holiday shopping rush in full swing this Cyber Monday, more than 71 million consumers are expected to grab online deals, making it one of the busiest days for e-commerce giants like Amazon.
To help manage the rush, the company is using artificial intelligence — AI — to offer customers even faster deliveries.
Amazon is boasting its quickest delivery time yet, saying that packages are being prepared for dispatch within 11 minutes of an order placement at same-day facilities. That pace is an hour faster than next-day or two-day centers.
"It's like our Super Bowl, we practice for it for months in advance," Scot Hamilton, Amazon's vide president of Planning and Routing Technology, said about Thanksgiving weekend.
"I kind of like to think about AI as like oxygen," he said. "You don't feel it, you don't see it. It's what makes the magic happen."
Amazon uses AI to analyze and plot delivery routes, adapting in real-time to traffic and weather conditions. It also uses artifical intelligence to forecast daily demand for over 400 million products, predicting where in the world they are likely to be ordered. This allows faster delivery, as delivery stations go from handling 60,000 packages a day to over 110,000 during the holiday season.
"AI will touch just about every piece of our supply chain," said Tye Brady, Amazon Robotics' chief technologist.
Amazon's new system, Sequoia, helps the company identify and store inventory 75% faster while reducing order processing time by 25%, which helps ensure gifts ordered on Cyber Monday arrive even faster.
Amid worries about possible job displacement due to AI, Amazon said AI and automation have led to the creation of 700 new job types related to robotics alone.
However, a Goldman Sachs report from March warns of significant global labor market disruption due to automation, potentially impacting 300 million jobs.
Amazon said it's been using machine learning and AI for more than 25 years. Brady said he gets questions about AI replacing actual human jobs a lot but views AI as a "beautiful ballet of people and machines working together in order to do a job."
Kris Van CleaveKris Van Cleave is CBS News' senior transportation and national correspondent based in Phoenix.
TwitterveryGood! (89224)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Skeletal remains found in plastic bag in the 1980s identified as woman who was born in 1864
- Trump’s case casts a spotlight on movement to restore voting rights to those convicted of felonies
- Nurse fired for calling Gaza war genocide while accepting compassion award
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Video shows man with suspended license Zoom into Michigan court hearing while driving
- Trump trial jury continues deliberations in hush money case
- Biden administration awarding nearly $1 billion for green school buses
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Actor Nick Pasqual accused of stabbing ex-girlfriend multiple times arrested at U.S.-Mexico border
Ranking
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Notorious B.I.G.’s Mom Voletta Wallace Says She Wants to “Slap the Daylights” Out of Sean “Diddy” Combs
- Gabrielle Union and Dwyane Wade Shower Daughter Zaya With Love On Her 17th Birthday
- Supreme Court sides with NRA in free speech dispute with New York regulator
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Man charged in AP photographer’s attack pleads guilty to assaulting officer during Capitol riot
- Bruhat Soma carries a winning streak into the Scripps National Spelling Bee finals
- Running for U.S. president from prison? Eugene V. Debs did it, a century ago
Recommendation
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Water main break disrupts businesses, tourist attractions in downtown Atlanta, other areas of city
Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Jaccob Slavin wins Lady Byng Trophy for sportsmanship
Can Trump still vote after being convicted?
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Delhi temperature may break record for highest ever in India: 126.1 degrees
Son of Buc-ee's co-founder indicted after secretly recording people in bathrooms of Texas homes, officials say
Evers appoints replacement for University of Wisconsin regent who refuses to step down