
A bank employee demonstrates use of a
robot suit to help lift heavy packages of cash.
-- Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.
Robots are starting to turn up in bank branches to greet customers, and now theyre getting ready for service behind the scenes to help older employees lift heavy stacks of cash.
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp., the core banking unit of Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc., said Thursday it has rented eight robotic suits developed by Japanese robotic maker Cyberdyne Inc. to ease the burden on the employees delivering cash. The bank says that would be a first among Japanese financial institutions.
There have been many cases when a physical burden was placed on senior employees carrying heavy parcels of bank notes and coins. By adopting Cyberdynes robotic suits, we can help reduce that burden, said Tomoyuki Narita, a spokesman at SMBC, Japans second-largest bank by assets after Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ.
SMBC Delivery Service Co., which mainly collects and delivers cash between bank outlets, has approximately 1,600 workers and about 16% of them are over age 65. We are currently placing the robotic suits at four outposts of the delivery service, but well consider adding them in more places including the banks branches after assessing the effects, Mr. Narita said.
He said the Hybrid Assistive Limb or HAL suit could reduce the burden of carrying a heavy object by about 40%, so that carrying a 10-kilogram container of bank notes and coins would feel like six kilograms.
Cyberdyne adopted the HAL name from the computer in the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey. The Tsukuba-based startup, which listed its shares on the Tokyo Stock Exchange last year, says the suits are designed to help nursing-home workers lift heavy objects and people undergoing physiotherapy recover strength in their arms or legs.
The suits, which are available only through lease, are already used at retirement homes and hospitals.
Yoshiyuki Sankai, Cyberdynes president, said he hoped his companys technology would support Japans aging society, where more than a quarter of the population is 65 or over.
The robotics company shares a name with the fictional defense firm behind Skynet, the artificial intelligence system that turned Earth into an apocalyptic wasteland in the Terminator series.
Poster Comment:
Even with robotic help, dumbass bankers need to learn the proper lifting technique.