19 posts tagged with “logistics-technology”

2026 marked the year logistics technology moved from pilot programs to operating infrastructure. This retrospective covers the AI, automation, visibility, compliance, and resilience trends that reshaped freight, warehousing, and supply chain execution.

The connected worker platform market is hurtling toward $20 billion by 2030. Here's what that means for warehouse operators, logistics managers, and the frontline workers who keep freight moving.

Warehouse digital twins are moving from slide-deck hype to measurable operational value, especially in inventory validation, labor planning, slotting, and congestion analysis.

Shippers increasingly expect forwarders to deliver real visibility, faster quoting, and connected execution, but many providers still lag on core technology capabilities.

AI is moving from packaging pilots into real operations in 2026. Here is why packaging data, right-sized automation, and machine vision now matter for throughput, labor, damage, and parcel costs.

The logistics industry is moving past legacy EDI and embracing API-first integration architectures. Here's what the shift means for freight forwarders and shippers evaluating TMS platforms in 2026.

FedEx has launched the logistics industry's largest AI literacy program, training 440,000+ employees through Accenture's LearnVantage platform. Here's why carrier workforce upskilling is becoming a decisive competitive advantage in supply chain.

Geekplus debuted its Gino 1 humanoid at LogiMAT 2026, Toyota deployed seven Agility Digit robots in Canada, and the humanoid robot market is projected to hit $15 billion by 2030. Here's what logistics leaders need to know about bipedal warehouse workers.

Huawei unveiled five intelligent transportation solutions at MWC Barcelona 2026. Here's what telecom-grade digital infrastructure means for ports, rail, customs, and global logistics networks.

Redwood Logistics' acquisition of Cincinnati-based Stridas signals a strategic shift in managed transportation—4PL providers are moving from horizontal scale plays to deep, industry-specific freight optimization for CPG and spirits shippers.