Insider Brief
- Simbe has launched Tally 4.0, the latest version of its autonomous shelf-scanning robot, positioning real-time shelf data as core infrastructure for modern retail operations after a decade of development with large global retailers.
- Tally 4.0 delivers up to 12 hours of runtime, expanded 3D and 360-degree visual coverage, ultra-high-resolution imaging, and upgraded edge AI built on NVIDIA’s full-stack infrastructure, enabling faster and more comprehensive insights into product availability, pricing, and placement.
- Simbe said the system serves as the primary data-capture engine for its Store Intelligence platform, supporting use cases from on-shelf availability and price verification to planogram compliance, replenishment, and omnichannel fulfillment across formats ranging from grocers to big-box and home-improvement stores.
Simbe has unveiled Tally 4.0, the latest generation of its autonomous shelf-scanning robot, as the company pushes to make real-time shelf data a foundational layer of modern retail operations. According to Simbe, the new system significantly extends runtime, improves vision and sensing capabilities, and deepens edge AI processing, reflecting a decade of development alongside large global retailers.
Tally 4.0 is designed to operate for up to 12 hours on a single charge, enabling full-day or overnight store coverage. The robot incorporates ultra-high-resolution and specialty cameras, expanded 3D and 360-degree sensing, and onboard AI acceleration built on NVIDIA’s full-stack infrastructure. Simbe said these upgrades allow the robot to capture more shelf data in a single pass and deliver faster insights into product availability, pricing accuracy, and item placement.
The company positions Tally 4.0 as the primary data-capture engine for its Store Intelligence platform, which connects physical shelf conditions to downstream retail decisions. Initial use cases include on-shelf availability, price and promotion verification, and precise item location, with more advanced applications supporting planogram compliance, replenishment, forecasting, omnichannel fulfillment, and merchandising optimization. Simbe said the system is designed to function across a wide range of store formats, from regional grocers to big-box and home-improvement chains.
A key focus of the new model is expanded visual coverage. Simbe said Tally 4.0 improves scanning of historically difficult fixtures such as top stock, upper shelving, coolers, freezers, hooks, and bunker displays, reducing blind spots that often limit the accuracy of shelf data. Dual fisheye cameras enable continuous panoramic capture, supporting denser store context and digital-twin-like walkthroughs at any time of day.
Edge computing has also been upgraded, with NVIDIA CUDA, TensorRT, and DOCA Argus supporting faster onboard processing and lower latency. According to Simbe, this allows more real-time autonomy while reducing the need to offload raw data to the cloud, a capability the company views as critical for operating safely and efficiently in live retail environments.
Despite the technical upgrades, the company said Tally 4.0 maintains the same shopper-friendly form factor as previous versions. Simbe said preserving the robot’s physical design reflects its emphasis on human-centered automation that integrates smoothly into customer-facing spaces without disrupting store traffic or shopper experience.
Simbe said Tally 4.0 will be available to customers starting in mid-2026, positioning the robot as a core infrastructure component for retailers seeking to close the gap between digital decision-making and physical execution at scale.




