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In its new white paper, “54 Technology Trends to Watch in 2020,” analysts identified 35 trends that will shape the technology market and 19 others that, although attracting huge amounts of speculation and commentary, look less likely to move the needle over the next 12 months.
Wearable cameras enable researchers to track patterns such as when consumers shift focus from their shopping lists and begin looking at unplanned or unfamiliar product choices.
Major drivers of a digital supply chain include demand for greater visibility and transparency in supply chain data process, faster adoption of IoT, increasing investment in supply chain innovation and rising demand from e-commerce.
The next-generation supply chain market is scheduled to reach $75 billion by 2030, up from $32 billion in 2019, according to “Next-Gen Supply Chain Market – Global Forecast to 2030,” a study released by LogisticsIQ, Singapore.
The study projects that the industry likely won’t experience dramatic job loss over the next decade, though many workers may see the content and quality of their jobs shift as technologies are adopted for particular tasks.
The UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education, Berkeley, Calif., released a study that details how the adoption of new technology can (and will) transform the way warehouses operate over the next 5-10 years.
In a new study published in the Journal of Foodservice Management & Education, wearable technology was found to expedite and positively impact food handler training.
The American Society of Safety Professionals (ASSP) Foundation, Park Ridge, Ill., released a fatigue research report that shows the value of wearable technology in the workplace.
Picavi, Germany, introduced new Glass Enterprise Edition 2 from Google, a pick-by-vision solution designed to deliver greater efficiency in visually guided order picking processes.
Nine technologies are working together to create next-generation supply chains that are digital, on-demand and always-on. In fact, these supply chain models will soon become the new supply chain reality, according to the fourth in a series of MHI Annual Industry Reports developed by MHI, Charlotte, N.C., in collaboration with Deloitte Consulting, LLC, New York.
InContext Solutions helps retailers and manufacturers more rapidly visualize, test and deploy new retail concepts using hyper-realistic simulations of actual retail environments.
InContext Solutions, Chicago, closed a $15.2 million funding round led by Intel Capital and Beringea to help the provider accelerate sales and marketing efforts, expand its geographic footprint and improve its virtual reality product portfolio, including further development of solutions for head-mounted devices.
A report produced by ABI Research predicts enterprise wearable scanner shipments will reach nearly 22 million by 2021, increasing from just 7 million in 2016.