Zebra's Industry Solutions can give your business a competitive advantage by connecting people, assets and data to help you make better decisions.
Scale and energise your retail strategy with a digital backbone that unifies your team, informs priorities and drives results with Zebra's retail technology solutions.
Zebra's healthcare technology solutions provide patient identity management, mobile health devices, and business intelligence data to improve efficiency.
Zebra’s manufacturing technology solutions enable manufacturers to become more agile, optimize plant floor performance and embrace market changes.
Zebra's market-leading solutions and products improve customer satisfaction with a lower cost per interaction by keeping service representatives connected with colleagues, customers, management and the tools they use to satisfy customers across the supply chain.
In today's world, the demands on transportation and logistics companies are higher than ever. Dedicated Warehouse, Fleet and Delivery, and Yard and Terminal solutions enable visibility to every aspect of your business and keep operations running flawlessly around the clock.
Zebra's hospitality technology solutions equip your hotel and restaurant staff to deliver superior customer and guest service through inventory tracking and more.
Empower your field workers with purpose-driven mobile technology solutions to help them capture and share critical data in any environment.
Zebra’s mobile computing, scanning, and printing solutions connect each operational area in your warehouse to give you the agility to realize transformational gains.
Zebra's range of mobile computers equip your workforce with the devices they need from handhelds and tablets to wearables and vehicle-mounted computers.
Zebra's desktop, mobile, industrial, and portable printers for barcode labels, receipts, RFID tags and cards give you smarter ways to track and manage assets.
Zebra's 1D and 2D corded and cordless barcode scanners anticipate any scanning challenge in a variety of environments, whether retail, healthcare, T&L or manufacturing.
Zebra's extensive range of RAIN RFID readers, antennas, and printers give you consistent and accurate tracking.
Choose Zebra's reliable barcode, RFID and card supplies carefully selected to ensure high performance, print quality, durability and readability.
Zebra's location technologies provide real-time tracking for your organisation to better manage and optimise your critical assets and create more efficient workflows.
Zebra's rugged tablets and 2-in-1 laptops are thin and lightweight, yet rugged to work wherever you do on familiar and easy-to-use Windows or Android OS.
With Zebra's family of fixed industrial scanners and machine vision technologies, you can tailor your solutions to your environment and applications.
Discover Zebra’s range of accessories from chargers, communication cables to cases to help you customise your mobile device for optimal efficiency.
Zebra's OEM scan engines, imagers, and private label OEM products offer flexible integration and help enhance product development with modern OEM technology.
Use Zebra's Temperature Monitoring and Sensing devices for vaccines, pharmaceuticals, biologics and any temperature-sensitive products.
Keep labor costs low, your talent happy and your organization compliant. Create an agile operation that can navigate unexpected schedule changes and customer demand to drive sales, satisfy customers and improve your bottom line.
Empower the front line with prioritized task notification and enhanced communication capabilities for easier collaboration and more efficient task execution.
Get full visibility of your inventory and automatically pinpoint leaks across all channels.
Reduce uncertainty when you anticipate market volatility. Predict, plan and stay agile to align inventory with shifting demand.
Drive down costs while driving up employee, security, and network performance with software designed to enhance Zebra's wireless infrastructure and mobile solutions.
Explore Zebra’s printer software to integrate, manage and monitor printers easily, maximising IT resources and minimising down time.
Make the most of every stage of your scanning journey from deployment to optimization. Zebra's barcode scanner software lets you keep devices current and adapt them to your business needs for a stronger ROI across the full lifecycle.
RFID development, demonstration and production software and utilities help you build and manage your RFID deployments more efficiently.
RFID development, demonstration and production software and utilities help you build and manage your RFID deployments more efficiently.
Zebra DNA is the industry’s broadest suite of enterprise software that delivers an ideal experience for all during the entire lifetime of every Zebra device.
Advance your digital transformation and execute your strategic plans with the help of the right location and tracking technology.
Aurora Focus™ runs on Zebra’s fixed industrial scanners and VS20/VS40/VS70 smart cameras and comes ready-made for specific tasks like barcode reading and verification, OCR, and presence/absence vision inspection.
Zebra Aurora Focus brings a new level of simplicity to controlling enterprise-wide manufacturing and logistics automation solutions. With this powerful interface, it’s easy to set up, deploy and run Zebra’s Fixed Industrial Scanners and Machine Vision Smart Cameras, eliminating the need for different tools and reducing training and deployment time.
Aurora Imaging Library™, formerly Matrox Imaging Library, machine-vision software development kit (SDK) has a deep collection of tools for image capture, processing, analysis, annotation, display, and archiving. Code-level customization starts here.
Aurora Design Assistant™, formerly Matrox Design Assistant, integrated development environment (IDE) is a flowchart-based platform for building machine vision applications, with templates to speed up development and bring solutions online quicker.
Designed for experienced programmers proficient in vision applications, Aurora Vision Library provides the same sophisticated functionality as our Aurora Vision Studio software but presented in programming language.
Aimed at machine and computer vision engineers, Aurora Vision Studio software enables users to quickly create, integrate and monitor powerful machine vision applications without the need to write a single line of code.
Adding innovative tech is critical to your success, but it can be complex and disruptive. Professional Services help you accelerate adoption, and maximise productivity without affecting your workflows, business processes and finances.
Zebra's Managed Service delivers worry-free device management to ensure ultimate uptime for your Zebra Mobile Computers and Printers via dedicated experts.
Find ways you can contact Zebra Technologies’ Support, including Email and Chat, ask a technical question or initiate a Repair Request.
Zebra's Circular Economy Program helps you manage today’s challenges and plan for tomorrow with smart solutions that are good for your budget and the environment.
This post was contributed by Steve Shaheen, CEO, DTG, a Zebra Premier Independent Software Vendor (ISV) Partner.
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Standing inside a massive, state-of-the art distribution center today can feel like something out of a science fiction novel, with robotic handling systems moving products to multiple locations, automatic sorting systems parsing out inventory and software and AI managing every aspect of operations.
The “dark warehouse,” which has been idealized for years, is now becoming reality.
Should we be worried?
I mean, the term “dark warehouse” was originally used to reinforce the fact that – thanks to automated machines – humans would not be needed in the warehouse and subsequently there would not be a need to light the way for workers. Are today’s labor constraints just a temporary issue? Do you just need to bide your time until you can get enough machines in place to render today’s intense hiring and retention efforts unnecessary?
As with many futuristic ideas, reality is a little less stark. The sun is setting on dark warehouses, at least as we once knew them. That’s because a fully automated and autonomous site is impractical. Who’s going to make sure the machines are operating properly? Who’s going to come up with creative ideas when the unexpected happens, or make the call when a change in the operating model is warranted?
According to Matthew Johnson-Roberson, director of Carnegie Mellon University’s Robotics Institute, in a Wall Street Journal article, ”there isn’t one single robot that’s so intelligent and so versatile that it’s like a human worker.”
As such, I cannot envision a world in which humans will be completely left out in the dark, so to speak. Less human intervention may be required to complete operations. Yet, human intervention will remain necessary, even in dark warehouses.
Today, AI and robots are only as good as the data they’re trained on. If a barcode is torn or faded and unreadable, or a product is missing from its typical location, a robot can be helpless. Despite the rise of generative AI capable of developing software code, producing training manuals in seconds or predicting shipping challenges, human logic is not yet replaceable. Yes, there are adaptive AI models that can see things that humans can’t and, to a certain extent, make business decisions on behalf of people. However, even their point of view is limited to the information they can access.
That’s why robots and other AI technologies will work alongside workers for the foreseeable future.
Of course, I realize a collaborative human-machine operation may still seem far-fetched. Most warehouse operators feel they are not yet in a position to roll out robots or other AI assistants. Yet, these warehouse operators are relying on digital tools -- warehouse management systems (WMS), laptops, handheld mobile computers, wearables, barcode scanners, RFID readers and other electronic devices – to boost productivity, accuracy, and speed. And these tools are already facilitating automation of certain tasks and decisions. Barcode scanners and RFID readers, for example, are automated data capture technologies. So, it’s not so far-fetched to say that every warehouse operator will soon be automating workflows to augment the workforce. It’s still humans driving the bus (or the mobile workstations), but they are being told exactly how to drive the bus and, in some cases, able to either take their foot off the gas a bit or put the pedal to the metal without introducing more risk into the operation.
I recently read a Zebra Technologies study which I found fascinating when it comes to learning about warehouse operators’ automation plans. According to the study, 68% of decision-makers plan to either partially or fully augment human labor with technology in the warehouse in the next five years, with automation efforts motivated most significantly (57%) by the desire to increase worker efficiency and productivity.
It seems that most firms have already taken the steps to leverage the WMS and other software to boost efficiency and productivity in the warehouse and across the supply chain, yet many are still requiring workers to traverse long, wide, and often dangerous sites to access them via fixed workstations.
If you’re a warehouse operator or 3PL service provider, you need to first take a long hard look at your operations and find ways to boost efficiency, productivity and safety using the most accessible digital tools available today. When you do, you will likely realize how motion waste occurs throughout each shift, as workers travel to not only fixed workstations, but also to printers, or charging stations to power their devices. While you may be well on your way to leveraging a WMS and other software systems to maintain a two-information flow across your operation, the next step is mobilizing the devices workers at the edge need to access those systems. Bringing devices, such as laptops, tablets, barcode scanners, RFID readers, printers or handheld devices to the point of task accomplishes all of the three goals: efficiency, productivity and safety, while minimizing risk. In fact, over 80% of warehouse associates say they feel more valued when their employer provides technology tools and automation to help them do their work. Considering how much pressure you are probably under to improve performance amidst a growing number of headwinds, it sounds like efforts to automate more processes would be welcomed by most, if not all, your human stakeholders. People will appreciate the help machines can provide.
Industrial markets have come a long way from manual processes in the warehouse, and many of your competitors are well on their way to leveraging the power of automation and technology to operate more productively and efficiently to keep pace with ever-increasing demands. Yet, while we’re on our collective way to the metaphoric dark warehouse, it’s important to shed light on how automation can augment and support the work of humans.
Check out the DTG website to learn more about how leading 3PLs are more easily bridging the gap between human workers and automation, and check out Zebra’s latest Warehousing Vision Study to learn more about what your competitors are doing and why – as well as what your workers want you do to in your warehouse.
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Steve Shaheen is CEO and co-founder of DTG, the leading provider of purpose-built power systems and mobile workstations that deliver mobilized productivity to companies in warehousing and 3PL, manufacturing, hospitality and food services, as well as other markets.
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