Voice-based warehouse “picking” systems are doing their part to help spur the use of wireless LANs.
Such systems learn the sound of a worker’s voice through speech recognition, then instruct that worker - who wears a portable computer and wireless headset - as to which items to pick from the warehouse inventory and where to deposit them for shipment.
A highly accurate voice-based picking system can greatly speed warehouse productivity, compared with workers having to print and consult paper instructions. Some workers - like those in the Dunkin’ Donuts Swedesboro, N.J., warehouse - drive carts or other small vehicles. So hands-free voice systems can also contribute to safety in picking operations.
Specifically, Dunkin’ Donuts has been piloting Airespace wireless to support the Voxware VoiceLogistics picking system. The renowned pink-and-orange striped donut chain plans to soon go commercial with its six Airespace multimode 802.11a/b/g lightweight access points and an Airespace 4000 WLAN switch, which it uses to segregate its traffic for performance.
It runs Voxware traffic on the 802.11b 2.4 GHz frequencies, data on the 802.11a 5 GHz frequencies and, for now, has disabled 802.11g to avoid interference with 802.11b traffic, says Boris Shubin, director of IT in the Dunkin’ Donuts Swedesboro site.
He notes that 802.11b (11M bit/sec) is used in lieu of the faster 802.11g (54M bit/sec) radios only because Voxware doesn’t yet work with the higher-speed network.
Shubin says the Airespace switch dictates prioritization for voice traffic according to the frequency band, so all traffic from the “Voxware WLAN” (802.11b) is prioritized highest, while the “data WLAN” (802.11a) has lowest priority.
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