16 posts tagged with “supply-chain-technology”

Supply chain technology is moving past disconnected automation pilots toward orchestration systems that turn events, rules, and exceptions into coordinated execution.

Supply chain technology is moving from dashboards to execution speed. In 2026, the winners will turn visibility, AI, orchestration, and automation into governed action.

Inbound Logistics just released its 2026 Top 100 Supply Chain Technology Providers list. Here's what the winners — from agentic AI warehouses to cloud-native WMS — reveal about where logistics technology spending is heading next.

DHL Supply Chain's deployment of SVT Robotics' SOFTBOT platform cuts warehouse robot integration from weeks to hours. Learn how plug-and-play middleware is solving the multi-vendor robotics bottleneck.

Knowledge graphs are transforming logistics by connecting fragmented data across carriers, warehouses, and suppliers into a unified intelligence layer. Here's how graph AI is replacing data silos and why it matters for freight operations in 2026.

Automation World 2026 in Seoul showcased Software-Defined Automation as the next paradigm shift in warehousing—where hardware-agnostic software orchestration layers replace rigid, equipment-specific programming to deliver flexible, AI-driven operations.

IFS completed its acquisition of Softeon on March 2, 2026, creating IFS Softeon and signaling a seismic shift in how enterprise software vendors approach warehouse management. With the global WMS market projected to reach $10.89 billion by 2031, the ERP-WMS convergence trend is reshaping supply chain technology strategy.

Dirty data is derailing supply chain AI initiatives in 2026. Learn why data quality—not technology—is the real bottleneck, and how freight organizations can build the data governance foundations needed for AI success.

The Defense Logistics Agency is using AI to push supply forecasting from 60% to 85% accuracy. Here's how military logistics innovations are creating a blueprint for commercial freight operations.

The Supply Chain as a Service (SCaaS) market is surging past $71 billion in 2026. Learn why mid-market shippers are ditching in-house logistics for outsourced platforms — and how CXTMS fits into the model.