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• Faster, hands-free picking is possible through augmented reality combined with wearable
technology, most notably smart glasses.
• Augmented reality (AR) picking using wearable technology combines the very best of vision-
and voice-guided picking to produce a faster, hands-free solution for industrial environments.
Voice Picking
The most progressive picking strategy yet. An administrator is assigned picking undertakings by
means of a headset and can affirm picks through voice control. The administrator is guided to
picking area from the PC voice. The capacity to utilize the headset empowers administrators to be
sans hands and the capacity to pick heavier items. The application has turned out to be mainstream
Put Wall in chilly storerooms that require an administrator to wear gloves keeping in mind the end goal
A Put Wall is a goods-to-person system directed by a software to handle large volume of orders to work inside the cooler or cooler. The marks required for voice picking gone from basic digits,
in a small footprint. This paperless process streamlines the supply chain by increasing efficiency to standardized identifications. Voice picking cuts additional time by streamlining the picking
and order accuracy. Put Wall applications decouple the picking and packing application of order procedure.
fulfillment maximizing the efficiency of each application. Automatic guided vehicles
Benefits of Put Wall: Automatic guided vehicles (AGVs) are the next step in turning warehouses into ever-more efficient
inventory management hubs.
o 100% Paperless
o Modular & Scalable Everything from stackers, forklifts, pallet trucks, and even inventory-carrying robots like Kiva and
Fetch robots are revolutionizing how work gets done in warehouses.
o Increased Order Efficiency
• In Kiva’s approach, goods are kept on portable storage units. When an order for an item arrives,
o Increased Order Accuracy battery-powered robots (called drive units) are guided by a computerized control system to fetch
the order.
o Ability to process single and multi-line orders
• They follow a grid system of 2D bar codes on the floor to navigate their way to mobile shelves
o Real-time Visibility containing the desired inventory.
• When the drive unit reaches the correct location on the warehouse floor, it positions itself beneath
a pod and lifts it from the ground.
• The unit is then guided to a human packer on the periphery of the floor who takes the process
over from there.