AT&T dealing with 5G robotics for usage in retailers

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AT&T is dealing with 5G self-governing robotics to be utilized in retail.


Angela Lang/CNET

Next time you hear “Cleanup on aisle 5,” it might be a robotic making that observation. AT&T is dealing with 5G self-governing robotics for retailers that would recognize any out-of-stock, mispriced or lost items in a shop, along with discovering shop risks. AT&T has actually partnered with Badger Technologies for the job, which was revealed Tuesday. 

5G, the next-generation mobile innovation, supplies quicker speeds, more capability and lower latency — the time it takes a stream or download to start when you have actually requested it.

AT&T at first released 5G in December in parts of Charlotte and Raleigh, North Carolina; Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Waco, Texas; Jacksonville, Florida; Louisville, Kentucky; and Atlanta, Indianapolis, New Orleans and Oklahoma City. In April, AT&T broadened its 5G network to parts of Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Jose and San Diego; Austin, Texas; Orlando, Florida; and Nashville. AT&T then included 5G to Vegas at the end of June.

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The carrier said the autonomous retail robots being developed in one of AT&T’s labs require too much data to be used on traditional Wi-Fi and need the better network security and control that 5G connectivity can provide.

“The AT&T Foundry is testing 5G connectivity with Badger Technologies’ robots in a multi-access edge computing (MEC) environment,” AT&T said. “5G using millimeter wave spectrum and edge computing could provide Badger Technologies with the lower latency and high throughput required to process and share vast amounts of data while running concurrently with other in-store network applications.”

Tim Rowland, CEO of Badger Technologies, said 5G connectivity could also be used for point of sales and operational systems in stores.

AT&T and Badger Technologies aren’t the only ones working on robots for retail, even if they appear first to base the bots on 5G. Giant Food Stores in January rolled out its own googly-eyed helper bot that takes on the aisles of the company’s grocery stores, flagging spills and other hazards. And Walmart in October said it’s testing the use of robots to handle repeatable tasks like scanning shelves and making sure pricing is correct. In December, Walmart said it would be place autonomous floor-scrubbing robots in its stores across the country.