Skip to content
  • About
    • About
    • Advertise
    • Cookie Notice
    • Terms of Use
  • Design
    • Design
    • Architecture
  • Business
    • Business
    • Finance
  • Environment
  • News
  • Other
  • Philanthropy
  • Real Estate
  • Science
    • Science
    • Medicine
  • Tech
    • Technology
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Autos
    • Robotics

Amazon Patents Wristband To Track Productivity And Direct Warehouse Staff Using Vibrations

Source: Dezeen, Gunseli Yalcinkaya
Photo: Amazon Patent

Online retailer Amazon has patented a wristband that can monitor the hand movements of its warehouse employees and direct them to items using small vibrations.

The patents, which were filed in 2016, outline Amazon’s vision for an inventory management system that uses wristbands to track workers’ performance and help them locate products in vast warehouses.

Called the Wristband Haptic Feedback System, the series of patents shows a system where employees are guided to “item bins” by tracking hand movements in real time using ultrasound technology.

Messages are then relayed to the employee using small vibrations emitted from the wristband’s bracket. If their hand moves away from a product, a vibration lets them know they are going in the wrong direction.

“Ultrasonic tracking” monitors performance
“Ultrasonic tracking of a worker’s hands may be used to monitor performance of assigned tasks,” reads one of the documents. “The ultrasonic unit is configured to be worn by a user in proximity to the user’s hand and to periodically emit ultrasonic sound pulses.”

“The management module monitors performance of an assigned task based on the identified inventory bin,” it continues.

Amazon believes this method could provide a solution to the time-consuming act of locating items in warehouses.

“Existing approaches for keeping track of where inventory items are stored may require the inventory system worker to perform time-consuming acts, such as pushing a button associated with the inventory bin or scanning a barcode associated with the inventory bin,” said Amazon in a statement to The Verge.

“Accordingly, improved approaches for keeping track of where an inventory item is stored are of interest.”

Amazon patents aim to save staff time locating products through surveillance
Although the system may raise problems concerning workplace surveillance and labour conditions, Amazon maintained that time-saving and convenience were the reasons for filing the patents.

“The speculation about this patent is misguided,” said the retailer. “Every day at companies around the world, employees use handheld scanners to check inventory and fulfil orders.”

“This idea, if implemented in the future, would improve the process for our fulfilment associates,” it continued. “By moving equipment to associates’ wrists, we could free up their hands from scanners and their eyes from computer screens.”

https://www.dezeen.com/2018/02/06/amazon-patents-wristbands/

Newsletter Sign-up

Technology
  • Data CentersAs AI Expands, Erin Brockovich Taps Communities To Map Data Center Concerns
  • WIFiThis Forgotten 2000s Tech Was Supposed To Be The Ultimate Wi-Fi Killer
  • StarlinkStarlink Hikes Prices For Nearly 3 Million US Customers. Just One Plan Escaped
  • DisneylandSmile, Your Face Is Being Scanned More Than You Think In Disneyland
  • PokemonPokemon Go Players Have Been Unwittingly Training Robots
Philanthropy
  • Two SizesCharitable Giving: It’s True, Our President Does Have A Heart Two Sizes Too Small
  • Melinda GatesMelinda French Gates Is Donating $215 Million To Women’s Health
  • Pittsburgh PostA Journalism Nonprofit Saves A Legacy Pittsburgh Newspaper From Closure
  • ICEJohn F. Kennedy Profile In Courage Award Goes To ‘The People Of The Twin Cities’ And Jerome Powell
  • MacKenzie ScottMacKenzie Scott Has Given $26B To Nonprofits Since 2019. Here’s What She Supported In 2025

Donate

Ventured delivers sharp, independent reporting on tech, business, real estate, and politics day in and day out — free of charge and free from corporate entanglements. If you value fearless journalism, original commentary, and content that answers to readers instead of advertisers, please consider supporting our work with a donation.

Transportation
  • VolkswagenVolkswagen To Slash 50,000 Jobs As Profits Plunge And Tariffs Bite
  • RobotaxisRobotaxis Could Be Coming To New York City… If They Clear The Political Minefield
  • CarsAmericans Hit The Brakes On Driving—And It Could Shift the Housing Market In Reverse
  • Classic CarLove Classic Cars? These Are The Most Retro Road Trips On Earth
  • Auto Safety8 Hidden Car Features That Will Change Your Driving Game
Real Estate
  • JapanWhy Japan Has Millions Of Abandoned Houses
  • HomebuilderMajor Homebuilders See Rising Orders But Shrinking Profits As Incentives Squeeze Margins
  • HomeownershipHow Homeownership Helps Build Wealth
  • Single Family HomeHousing Is Stable, But Still Out Of Reach For Many Americans
  • A-frameAmazon Is Selling A Cozy A-frame Tiny House That’s Customizable With Up to 4 Bedrooms For Under $40K
Finance
  • Bezos TaxesBezos Argued It’s Unnecessary For Struggling Families To Cough Up Income Taxes In The Wealthiest Country In The World.
  • Vanity SpendingThe Golden Age Of Vanity Spending
  • JapanWhy Japan Has Millions Of Abandoned Houses
  • TariffsAmerica’s Great Layoff Festival: Inflation, War, Tariffs, And The Curious Case Of The Disappearing Paycheck
  • EggsLet Them Eat Cake: Many Americans Can’t Afford Eggs, But Here’s A $1 Billion Ballroom Backed By The GOP
News
  • TrumpCritics Say Trump Squandered Strong Economic Inheritance During First Year Back In Office
  • The Weekly SpillThe Weekly Spill (In Shorts)
  • The Weekly SpillThe Weekly Spill (In Shorts)
© Copyright 2014-2026. Ventured is the Official Blog of Silicon Bay Partners.
Powered by WordPress