Wiliot has deepened its push into so-called Physical AI by striking a strategic partnership with Databricks, in a move the company says will help enterprises turn streams of data from connected products and assets into faster operational decisions.
Under the agreement, Wiliot will run its Physical AI platform and supply chain automation tools on Databricks’ infrastructure, allowing customers to ingest, manage and analyse real-time signals generated by Wiliot’s battery-free ...
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IoT Pixels. Those postage-stamp-sized devices are designed to produce continuous item-level data across warehouses, retail floors and transport networks, giving companies visibility into the movement and condition of goods that has traditionally been difficult to capture at scale.
The companies say the combination of Wiliot’s sensing technology and Databricks’ lakehouse architecture will let customers combine physical-world data with existing enterprise systems in a single governed environment. In practical terms, that could support more automated inventory management, earlier detection of supply chain disruption, and better control over cold chain logistics, where temperature sensitivity can make or break product quality.
Wiliot’s platform already supports a set of supply chain applications covering inventory visibility, automated receiving, shipment verification, reusable asset tracking and temperature monitoring. The Databricks tie-up is intended to strengthen those tools by giving them the compute, storage and data-handling backbone needed to process larger volumes of live data more efficiently.
Adi Applebaum, Wiliot’s vice-president of product, said in a statement that running the platform on Databricks would help customers put physical-world data to work at scale. He said the partnership gives Wiliot a more robust foundation for turning large quantities of sensor data into immediate business decisions.
Databricks’ Roberto Robles, who leads go-to-market efforts for consumer goods and retail, described Physical AI as a next phase of data intelligence and said the collaboration is meant to bring together physical and enterprise data sources to support sharper decision-making. He added that the technology could help retailers build more connected store experiences by combining signals on product location, freshness, temperature and inventory, with the aim of reducing stockouts and shrink.
The partnership also extends Wiliot’s wider partner ecosystem as the company seeks to position its technology as a layer of intelligence across retail, consumer packaged goods and logistics. Industry reports have said some major enterprises, including Walmart and Royal Mail, are already using Wiliot’s platform, underlining the commercial interest in item-level visibility as supply chains become more automated and more data-driven.
Source: Noah Wire Services