inVia Robotics
Machinery : Industrial Robot : Autonomous Mobile Robot
Our Robotics-as-a-Service model knocks down the biggest barrier to entry for automation–massive infrastructure investment–by offering automation as a subscription-based service. Instead of cost-prohibitive CapEx, we provide autonomous robots, powerful software, and dedicated engineering expertise as a cost-effective, quickly-deployed service that integrates seamlessly into your current warehouse.
Assembly Line
How WMS and WES platforms work together to maximize warehouse efficiency
Warehouse Management Systems (WMS) and Warehouse Execution Systems (WES) communicate with each other through integration and data exchange mechanisms. Typically, the WMS serves as the higher-level system responsible for managing inventory, orders, and overall warehouse processes. The WES, on the other hand, focuses on the real-time execution of tasks within the warehouse. These systems communicate through APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) or middleware, allowing them to share crucial information such as order details, inventory levels, and task priorities. This integration ensures that the warehouse operates efficiently, with the WMS providing instructions and data to the WES, which then orchestrates the execution of tasks on the warehouse floor.
inVia Connect simplifies the integration between inVia Logic WES software and any WMS. It streamlines integration and communication between your disparate systems, allowing for seamlessness in inventory management and order processing. With InVia Connect’s proprietary technology, it reduces manual labor and improves accuracy and efficiency – all while providing real-time visibility into every aspect of warehouse operations.
Warehouse Software Automation to Robotic Automation: Choosing a Scalable Solution that Matches Your Pace
In the past, the logistics chain was much more straightforward; warehouses delivered the bulk products on pallets to stores, and then consumers would travel to stores to select and purchase the items. Today, eCommerce fulfillment workers need to access thousands of SKUs that are ordered in random quantities and combinations and at random times. At the same time, warehouses struggle to attract workers in the current labor shortage.
Robotic automation in e-commerce fulfillment centers improves efficiency, productivity, and profitability while reducing labor costs in the warehouse. Traditionally, the most significant barrier to entry for warehouse automation was the cost, along with the necessary changes in infrastructure to accommodate it. Many robotic solutions require significant upfront capital investments.
You're Hired: Recruiting Mobile Robots
While industrial robots have been part of the automation mix for decades, key advances in sensors, artificial intelligence (AI), software, machine vision, and light detection and ranging (LiDAR), among other technologies, are coalescing to empower an emerging category of more capable mobile and collaborative robots that are easier to program, less expensive to deploy, and far more flexible in the kinds of tasks they can perform.