Amazon Scout, the Autonomous Delivery Robot, Goes to Finland to Learn New Skills

Amazon Scout, the autonomous delivery robot of the e-commerce company, is set to feature additional technology as it goes to Helsinki, Finland.

Amazon Scout, the Autonomous Delivery Robot, Goes to Finland to Learn New Skills
This picture taken on on October 22, 2019, shows a new Amazon warehouse, part of mobile robotic fulfilment systems also known as 'Amazon robotics', in Bretigny-sur-Orge, some 30kms south of Paris. by PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP via Getty Images

Amazon wrote in a blog post that it is slated to launch a "Development Center" for the future of Scout, which is currently in its testing stage in the United States.

The e-commerce giant deployed the independent delivery robot on January 24, 2019. It only had six robots during its pilot in Snohomish County, Washington. Initially, the Scouts had to be accompanied by an Amazon employee as they delivered.

Amazon Scout, the Autonomous Delivery Robot, Goes to Finland to Learn New Skills
08 December 2020, North Rhine-Westphalia, Mönchengladbach: Parcels are placed on a trolley in a logistics centre of the mail order company Amazon. A particularly large number of orders are processed during the Christmas business. by Rolf Vennenbernd/picture alliance via Getty Images

Amazon Scout Goes to Finland

The tech giant announced that more than two dozen of its engineers are heading to Helsinki to create more features for the Amazon Scout.

Moreover, the set of engineers in the Development Center will collaborate with the Amazon Scout team based in Germany, the U.K., and the U.S. They will specifically focus on producing 3D software that could further help the robot learn more human-like skills as it delivers products.

The goal of the development facility is to make sure that "Scout can navigate safely while making deliveries," Amazon wrote.

The tech giant further noted that they will be adding more engineers to the new facility as the research progresses.

Amazon Scout and 3D

CNBC observed that Amazon announced the new facility six months after the company took over a 3D modeling firm named Umbra. The acquisition has turned out to be beneficial the automated delivery robot.

Umbra boasts itself as a 3D modeling company providing services to an endless number of devices.

The news outlet also noticed a pattern that Amazon follows: when it acquires a company, it then creates facilities in newfound locations.

For instance, Amazon likewise put up a facility in Cambridge, U.K., after completing its take over of an artificial intelligence company, Evi Technologies.

Related Article: Amazon Wants FTC Chair Khan Removed From Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Acquisition Issue, Claiming She Is Bias

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Written by Teejay Boris

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