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Inbox Zero was just the start of AI’s industrial revolution

Netflix took five years to hit a million users. Facebook did it in ten months. ChatGPT? Just five days. Change in tech isn’t just fast, it’s exponential. While most AI applications today still focus on personal productivity — helping us answer emails faster or summarise meetings — a much bigger shift is underway. AI is moving from isolated use cases to deeply integrated and enterprise-wide capabilities that are reshaping how entire industries operate.

Deeper integration: Radar gets a LiDAR-level upgrade 

AI isn’t just improving business operations. It’s rewriting the rules in core technologies, like automotive sensing.
 
Take radar, long seen as the cheaper, lower-resolution cousin of LiDAR. Thanks to deep learning, radar is now generating 4D point clouds, enabling object recognition and full-scene understanding, once exclusive to LiDAR, but with better cost-efficiency and all-weather performance. This means radar is no longer the backup sensor, but a smart, scalable alternative for mass-market autonomy.

Broader integration: AI as the digital coworker

Today’s AI “robots” aren’t made of metal. They’re software agents embedded in your tech stack. Being tied into CRMs, ERPs, ticketing systems, and knowledge bases, they do more than just automate; they understand, reason, and act. 
 
AI can now handle complex workflows like customer support resolution, internal service requests, and even proactive IT troubleshooting. These bots are not only responding but also learning and improving with every interaction. The result? Faster service, lower costs, and human teams that are freed up to focus on creativity, strategy, and innovation.

Some standout solutions powering this shift include:

DHL & Locus Robotics
DHL celebrates 500 million warehouse picks powered by Locus Robotics’ autonomous mobile robots, driving efficiency, safety, and scalability in supply chains.

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IBM watsonx Assistant Case Studies
Global enterprises use IBM’s conversational AI to streamline support, cut costs, and enhance customer engagement.

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Alexa Case Studies
Real-world examples of how brands and developers use Alexa to create voice-first experiences that drive customer interaction and brand loyalty.

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Moveworks
An AI-powered service copilot that resolves IT and HR issues autonomously which reduces ticket volumes and boosts employee productivity.

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Ada
A no-code chatbot platform that helps businesses automate customer support across channels. Fast to deploy, easy to scale.

Learn more about Ada