MIT is designing a robot to bag your groceries at the supermarket

Shawn Knight

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Forward-looking: Researchers from MIT's Computer Science & Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) are developing a robotic grocery bagging system that could one day show up in your local supermarket. The creation, aptly named Grocery Packing Robot, is currently able to pick up and pack a variety of items spanning different shapes and sizes.

Rather than focusing on speed or packing efficiency, the CSAIL team's top goal is to ensure its bot doesn't damage delicate items like fruit or chips.

Using a range of sensors and soft robotic grippers, the bot is able to see items coming down the conveyor belt and determine the best way to grasp them. Tactile sensors on the pads of the grippers measure how hard or soft an item is and create a delicacy score. More robust items are packed first while delicate products get placed into a buffer to be packed later so they don't get crushed.

Don't expect to see robo baggers at your local grocery store anytime soon. This project is still in the research stage and seemingly has a long way to go before it is ready for commercialization. Packing speed will certainly have to improve, which will no doubt involve adding additional sensors and improved algorithms to the mix.

There's also the question of reliability. I don't know about you, but I run into issues all the time with self-checkout kiosks at stores. Adding yet another machine to the process certainly has the potential to slow the flow of traffic even more, and I can't image a complex machine like this would be cheap.

Some of the simplest tasks for humans are the most challenging for robots. Bagging groceries could prove that the juice isn't always worth the squeeze.

What does grocery bagging at your local supermarket look like? Where I live, only one grocery store has enough baggers to constantly meet demand. Another has just a couple that hover between lines, but most leave the task of bagging up to the shopper.

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I don't know about you, but I run into issues all the time with self-checkout kiosks at stores.
Is this a journalistic article, or an op-ed? It's not labelled as opinion.

And yes, checkout kiosks are usually slower than a trained cashier and bagger ... but there's usually zero wait time at the kiosk in my local market, whereas the cashier has several people waiting.

Some of the simplest tasks for humans are the most challenging for robots. Bagging groceries could prove that the juice isn't always worth the squeeze.
Robotic chicken deboners -- a feat that requires a large degree of manual dexterity -- are more than 20 times faster than human ... and a recently-built robot can now solve a random Rubiks Cube (including the manual manipulations required) in less than 0.5 seconds.

But the real key here isn't present performance. It's that robotic performance keeps increasing, year after year after year.
 
Mad to think someone thinks that using ANY electricity to power something as useless as that is a good idea...
 
Bagging groceries. MAIN reason I prefer SELF checkout. If you let the checkout person bag, you end up with 4,305 bags. With self checkout, I end up with 2,3 bags.
 
Bagging groceries. MAIN reason I prefer SELF checkout. If you let the checkout person bag, you end up with 4,305 bags. With self checkout, I end up with 2,3 bags.
I like bagging my own groceries, not because I can do it better than 99.99% of the people that bag groceries at the store for you, but I can do it in fewer bags. That's the main reason I like shopping at Cub Foods, you bag your own.

My first official job as a teenager was working at a grocery store and I spent nearly 2 years there, mostly bagging groceries. I'm very particular at how it's done which is why I hate when the wife bags our groceries because she just throws everything haphazardly into plastic bags to go as fast as she can and it bothers me. I constantly tell her she's not any good at bagging groceries and to get out of the way to let me do it. Her 5 plastic bags of mismatched items, I bag them all up in 2 paper bags....this isn't Target where you sometimes get a plastic bag for every 1 item, get out of my way! Let me do it.
 
Corporate thinking is just plain evil. Robots instead of a human. Ad infinitum...
We end up with zero humans and all robots.
have an nice day...
 
Corporate thinking is just plain evil. Robots instead of a human. Ad infinitum...
We end up with zero humans and all robots.
have an nice day...
Are you okay with cashiers simply scanning a barcode on the product, rather than someone having to put price tags on everything and the cashier enter the price in by hand each time? Are you alright with the backroom workers having pallet jacks & forklifts to move stuff around with, instead of having to hire more people to haul everything around by hand? Where do you draw the line between labor saving technology that is okay and technology that is not okay?
 
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