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Amazon's robotics, AI push not eliminating jobs as tech giant continues automation wave

Amazon's robotics, AI push not eliminating jobs as tech giant continues automation wave

News.com.au2 days ago
Amazon warehouses are still a viable job option for unskilled and entry-level workers, executives of the e-commerce giant say, despite massive robotics and AI investments.
Speaking to NewsWire in Japan this week, Amazon's global head of PR for robotics and AI, Xavier Chao, compared AI robots and sorting machines to offices having a coffee machine and snacks close to the desks.
'Retention is very, vitally important for us if we want to continue to manage and sustain our business and grow; we have to retain our workforce,' Mr Chao said.
'And so we think that innovation is part of the solution of creating a nice workplace that attracts people, and retains staff.'
Australia has eight Amazon 'fulfilment centre' warehouses; seven of these do not have Amazon's robots. The custom designed and built robots operate using AI, moving stacks of products for humans to pick and put into boxes.
Australia's robotised Amazon warehouse is at Kemps Creek in Sydney, and employs about 2500 workers.
With Australia's comparatively low-tech Amazon facilities - compared to warehouses in comparable countries - retraining Australian workers to fix and maintain Amazon's robots has stalled.
In June, Amazon announced it would be investing $20bn in data centres in Australia, reiterating concerns about the e-commerce company's entrenchment in the Australian economy.
Anthony Albanese faces internal pressure from high-ranking Labor MPs, The Australian reports, over accusations Amazon undermines labour laws and employs tax avoidance tactics.
These criticisms are echoed by unions - the ACTU, TWU and the SDA - who claim Amazon Australia's workplace practices are unethical.
Asked if operating in countries with relatively strong workplace protections was tough for Amazon, Mr Chao said 'Right now, what we're really hyper-focused on is can these systems actually benefit our frontline workers, and getting feedback from them'.
He argues wide-scale automation is good for workers.
'If we can create the most innovative workplace that we possibly can, we want to try to do three things.
'Safety … Ease - all of us want to have an easier job.
'And then three, it's exposure. So a lot of people who come and work at an Amazon facility, you know, there are people from all walks of life.'
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The Sell: Lingerie queen finds bolthole at Circular Quay
The Sell: Lingerie queen finds bolthole at Circular Quay

Daily Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Daily Telegraph

The Sell: Lingerie queen finds bolthole at Circular Quay

Don't miss out on the headlines from NSW. Followed categories will be added to My News. Honey Birdette lingerie founder Eloise Monaghan and her wife, interior stylist and photographer Rebecca Collinson-Smith, have bought themselves a bolthole in Sydney. It's the first purchase together for the expectant couple, who have spent $6.39m at Opera Residences at Circular Quay. Their 125sq m apartment was marketed as the largest two-bedroom floorplan on the harbourside of the 2021 building developed by Landream and Macrolink to a design by Tzannes Architects and Crone Partners, with interiors by Make. The apartment has views towards the Harbour Bridge from its open-plan living and dining area. Its shared facilities include a pool, spa, gym plus a wine storage room. Grant Ashby at Sydney Cove Property noted on the late-2024 listing that the near-new apartment had never been lived in. Honey Birdette founder Eloise Monaghan and her wife, photographer Rebecca Collinson-Smith, have bought a bolthole in Sydney. Picture: The couple spent $6.39m on the largest two-bedroom floorplan on the harbourside of Opera Residences at Circular Quay. Picture: Records show it first sold for $5.9m in 2022 and then $6.35m just 10 months later. Their ownership is divided 78 per cent with Monaghan and 22 per cent with Collinson-Smith, who hails from Minnamurra on the NSW Illawarra coast. Monaghan, who sold the lingerie company in 2021 to PLBY, the company behind Playboy magazine, married Collinson-Smith in Sydney last December with Graeme Collinson-Smith, father of the bride, as the marriage celebrant. The couple have recently collaborated in launching Collinson-Smith's swim and resort-wear brand Hunting Hue which has an outlet in The Rocks. Monaghan is now the founder and chief executive officer of the Los Angeles-based Blonde Velvet (BVRGRP), a global investment company for luxury brands. Rebecca Collinson-Smith and Eloise Monaghan. Picture: Supplied Monaghan's former Surry Hills abode, bought in 2020 by then wife Natalie Johnson for $3,025,000 from F45's Marc Marano, was sold last month, at an undisclosed price. Back in 2020, Oxford Real Estate's Matt Marano had been guiding $2.6m when The Wentworth Courier reported the duo had 'fallen in love' with the three-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment before its first open. This time it took 82 days to sell through TRG, who'd given $4.2m guidance for the 250sq m space. atop a 1910 Reservoir St building near Central Station with a north-facing 70sq m entertainers' balcony. Monaghan and Johnson also recently sold their SJB-designed Potts Point investment apartment for $2m. The Ida, Brougham St apartment cost $1.6m in 2016. Monaghan, who founded the Honey Birdette label in Brisbane's West End in 2006 with then girlfriend Janelle Barboza, owned 15 per cent of the company and collected about $66m in cash and shares in the $440m PLBY deal. Retail entrepreneurs Brett Blundy and Ray Itaoui were the substantial shareholders. RABBITOH BOUNCES BRISSIE PAD FOR NEW DEAL South Sydney Rabbitohs star Jack Wighton has sold his longtime Brisbane investment apartment for $650,000. It is understood that Wighton is redirecting his equity into another new-build investment opportunity. Wighton bought the Newstead apartment off the plan in 2016, paying $445,000 when he was four years into his 11-year stint at the Canberra Raiders. McGrath Bulimba agent Sam Battel sold the apartment to an investor within three weeks of its listing last month. NRL star Jack Wighton has sold his Brisbane investment apartment. Picture: The one-bedroom Ajax apartment was pitched at both owner-occupiers and investors, but marketed as a 'high-demand rental opportunity'. The $620-a-week lease in place until August next year, so reflecting a 4.96 per cent yield for the 54sq m unit that has an open-plan living kitchen and dining space, a study area, and a balcony. PropTrack puts the one-bedroom median at $585,000, up 15 per cent over the past year after 105 sales that spent a median 35 days on market. PropTrack calculates the median yield as 5.1 per cent. Jack Wighton, Monisha Lew Fatt and their young girls Picture: Instagram Wighton had bought it direct from developer two years before completion. It is set in the $195m complex of four buildings, developed by JGL Properties just a few blocks back from the Brisbane River. The Bureau Proberts-designed complex has communal facilities including two barbecue zones, an outdoor cinema, a 25m lap pool, spa, gym and sauna. Wighton retains the home he bought with wife Monisha Lew-Fatt for $1,135,000 in 2020. The 3.36ha regional NSW estate, just off the Old Federal Highway at Bywong, has a 1970s home with six bedrooms. Having grown up in Orange, Wighton, 32, made his debut for the Raiders in 2012. He left after 242 games, and has played 32 games since joining the Rabbitohs. COURT THWARTS WATERHOUSE GARAGE ALTERATION The extension plans of estranged bookmaking family scion David Waterhouse for his soon-to-be-sold Rose Bay property have been scuppered by a 26,000-word NSW Land & Environment Court judgment. Justice Sarah Pritchard ruled that a 2007 development consent granted by Woollahra Council for 'alterations and additions to existing garage/studio' had lapsed in 2012 and could not be relied upon by Waterhouse, who bought the 1929 Spanish Mission property in 2020 for $10.25m from retired medical entrepreneur Robert Gregg. David Waterhouse's Villa Biscaya at Rose Bay. Picture: The court matter reviewed whether works had physically been commenced by Gregg and whether conditions that required compliance prior to the work being undertaken had been met by Trico Constructions, which went into liquidation in 2017. There were 56 prior judgments cited as Waterhouse's neighbour, Mincong Huang, successfully sought to stop the latest reincarnation of the garaging at Villa Biscaya. Waterhouse, as the first respondent, had costs awarded against him. David Waterhouse. Woollahra Council and Michael Rothner, who is due to settle its reputed $26m purchase later this month following his June 2023 exchange, were the second and third respondent with submitting appearances. The triumphant counsel was Nick Eastman SC, instructed by McCullough Robertson Lawyers. They defeated the arguments put by Francis Douglas KC. Between 2012 and 2024, the originating Tivoli Ave development consent has been subject to four applications, which Huang referenced as 'modification creep'. 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Picture: He made the move to the US in 2022, staying initially with Seven as their senior vice-president for entertainment and content in North America. Sunday Confidential revealed last year he was working as an executive producer for Merit Street, a cable TV and streaming network launched by Dr Phil McGraw. Michael Pell. Picture: X/Twitter Last week, Dr Phil's network filed for bankruptcy saying its partner Trinity Broadcasting had reneged on a joint-venture agreement and the channel was going off air. PPD's Thomas Heath and Marcus Licastro have an August 2 auction for the listing, which garnered over 1000 page views in its first week on Less than 300m from the beach, the two-bedroom apartment is marketed as a 'chic oasis set quietly back from the street'. Spanning 70sq m, with a balcony, on the top floor of a mid-1960s block, Pell paid $1.4m in 2021. The agents are suggesting it could rent at $1000 per week for an investor. The expectations are slightly below the median two-bedroom apartment price in Clovelly that sits at $1,725,500, based on 17 sales, according to PropTrack. Pell spent 18 years at Sunrise and is credited for the show's continued success. PADDO SALE ADDS TO WINTER RUSH Jason Entwistle, the director of strategic development at ASX-listed wealth management platform Hub24, and his wife, Julie, have sold in Paddington. They are whispered to have accepted $5.34m before last weekend's scheduled auction for their four-bedroom, two-bathroom Regent St terrace. Jason Entwistle, the director of strategic development at ASX-listed wealth management platform Hub24, and his wife, Julie have sold in Paddington. Picture: It had been marketed with $5.25m hopes through Sotheby's International. Jason Entwistle. 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‘Historic': Sydney rail strikes end as unions vote to accept pay rise
‘Historic': Sydney rail strikes end as unions vote to accept pay rise

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘Historic': Sydney rail strikes end as unions vote to accept pay rise

Rail unions have voted to accept the NSW government's pay offer, ending the bitter dispute and giving Sydneysiders a break following months-long widespread chaos on the train network. On Saturday at 4pm, 11,735 union members participated in the vote, with 92 per cent voting in favour of the government's proposed 12 per cent pay rise over the next three years. The unions initially sought a 32 per cent pay rise over three years and a 35-hour working week, which was met by a proposed 9.5 per cent rise over the same time frame. The Electrical Trade Unions (ETU) was the only union to not back the proposed Enterprise Agreement, with the Rail, Tram and Bus Union (RTBU) endorsing the proposed pay increase. The agreements signals an end to the industrial action that triggered pandemonium for Sydney commuters for several months, with hundreds of services cancelled or delayed since September, leaving them stranded or crammed inside crowded carriages for hours on end. The Fair Work Commission ordered the unions halt their industrial action in February, with the order lifted from July 1. NSW Minister for Transport said the agreement would offer a sigh of relief to commuters. 'We want to acknowledge the period of protected industrial action was drawn-out and took its toll on rail passengers,' he said. 'Resolution of the matter will now allow Sydney Trains and NSW TrainLink to focus solely on improving reliability and services for those more than a million passengers who use the network each day. 'We will continue to invest record amounts into improved maintenance and work to our plan to lift reliability.' Despite not reaching the initially proposed figure, the RTBU said the agreement was 'historic' and an 'epic effort' from the 'bargaining team: 'This result is a powerful demonstration of the strength, unity, and determination of RTBU members in the face of a very difficult and, at times, exhausting campaign, you stood together, and it made all the difference,' the statement read. 'Congratulations to every member who participated in actions, attended meetings, had conversations with their colleagues, stood strong, and demanded better. 'We will now move to the next steps of formal approval,' the union added.

How two brothers turned a phone case into a $100M fashion empire
How two brothers turned a phone case into a $100M fashion empire

News.com.au

time6 hours ago

  • News.com.au

How two brothers turned a phone case into a $100M fashion empire

It started with a single phone case produced by two dentists. Now it is one of the world's fastest-growing luxury brands. Australian brothers Omar and Zane Sabré's 'side hustle' has evolved into Maison de Sabré, a homegrown luxury leather house now standing shoulder to shoulder with the world's most elite fashion brands. 'We're literally just two guys that started just thinking that they could do something. And then really actually followed through and did it … it's phenomenal,' Omar said. 'We really wake up every morning and just sort of pinch ourselves and be like, this is insane, you know?' Walking away from careers as dentists, the brothers credit their rise to an unwavering commitment to craftsmanship, from their very first meticulously designed phone case to today's collection of refined luxury bags. 'We were there to sort of shake luxury up and give it a new definition,' Omar said. What started as a direct-to-consumer business has grown into a full-scale luxury house, now sold in over 150 countries and stocked by retailers such as Nordstrom, Saks Fifth Ave, and Bloomingdale's – with revenue set to surpass $100 million for the first time in 2025. Launched during Zane's time at dental school, the brothers poured everything into their 'side hustle' and by the time Zane graduated, the brand had become their full-time focus. 'By the time I graduated, we made the decision to go full-time in the business and leave our dental careers behind us, which was back in between 2017 and 2018,' Zane said. 'From there, we only had one core product, which was this phone case, it was quite a meticulous phone case, we used … some of the best materials and the best craft.' In just eight years, the duo has turned their vision into one of Australia's most prominent fashion exports, proudly redefining what Australian luxury looks like on the global stage. 'We're able to export Australian creativity onto the world stage and I think that's something that's been really rare,' Omar said. 'It's something that we really take a lot of pride in … because when people hear about Australian leather goods, it's typically the first time they've ever heard that phrase.' The bond between the brothers has been a quiet superpower behind the business – helping them scale fast without losing the trust, chemistry, and aligned purpose that comes from family. For Zane, working with his brother is the 'best thing in the world'. 'There is nobody else you typically really want to do it with other than your own blood, someone you've grown up with and have been joined at the hip ever since you were kids, 'On paper, it makes the most sense; in reality, it makes even more sense.' Described as a quiet luxury 'disrupter', Maison de Sabré is set to become the first Australian brand to launch a multi-venue retail activation across Saint Tropez, Mallorca, and Cannes, a space long reserved for heritage fashion houses. 'I think we're on to something truly special,' Zane said. 'We're excited to represent a brand from Australia as two guys that really knew nothing about business or entrepreneurship or luxury or fashion eight, nine years ago, now being able to sit alongside some of the best in the world.'

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