Companies from around the world traveled to the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this month to show off their latest ...
Compared to manual workers, industrial robots are stronger and faster and can work 24/7. And yet, the presence of industrial robots in global manufacturing is extremely low. According to IFR reports, ...
DataMesh, a leading digital twin and spatial intelligence technology provider, today announced the launch of DataMesh Robotics, an embodied AI data product solution designed for industrial and ...
The fully robotic car plant that once sounded like science fiction is now a concrete industrial goal, with analysts expecting the first facility where machines build entire vehicles with no human on ...
Robots are getting better at doing human jobs. That’s probably good for the economy — but there are some serious downsides, too. Machines are expected to displace about 20 million manufacturing jobs ...
By enabling the creation of modular workcells and lot-of-one production, AMRs are the key to replacing linear assembly lines ...
AI-enabled and virtual training gets robots to work faster—and will empower a more flexible era of automation. In partnership withSiemens Imagine the bustling floors of tomorrow’s manufacturing plant: ...
Imagine “hiring” a robot instead of buying one. That’s the core idea behind Robot-as-a-Service (RaaS), a business model that ...
In cognitive manufacturing, production is being transformed as humans increasingly work alongside intelligent robots. We are entering a new industrial revolution, the cognitive industrial revolution, ...
The global industrial robotics market was around US$ 54 billion in 2023 and is estimated to reach US$ 163 billion by 2032, growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 12.6% during the forecast ...
Robots are getting better at doing human jobs. That’s probably good for the economy — but there are some serious downsides, too. Machines are expected to displace about 20 million manufacturing jobs ...
Robots are getting better at doing human jobs. That’s probably good for the economy — but there are some serious downsides, too. That means about 8.5% of the global manufacturing workforce could be ...