Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News

Humanoid Robots Just Quadrupled and Theyre Coming for Your Warehouse Job Real Talk on the 38 Billion Bot Boom

2 min · 3 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Humanoid Robots Just Quadrupled and Theyre Coming for Your Warehouse Job Real Talk on the 38 Billion Bot Boom

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346 episodios

episode Robots Got Richer: 16 Billion Dollar Glow Up, Humanoids Hit the Factory Floor and Amazon Goes Shopping artwork

Robots Got Richer: 16 Billion Dollar Glow Up, Humanoids Hit the Factory Floor and Amazon Goes Shopping

This is your Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. Industrial robotics is moving from incremental upgrades to a full scale reset, as intelligent automation systems quietly become the core infrastructure of modern industry. The International Federation of Robotics reports that the global market value of industrial robot installations has reached a record 16.7 billion dollars, driven by demand for more versatile, software defined machines that merge information technology and operational technology on the factory floor. According to the federation, this convergence allows robots to tap real time data, analytics, and cloud connectivity, making even traditional six axis arms behave more like adaptive cyber physical systems than fixed equipment. On the technology front, industry experts at the Consumer Electronics Show 2026 highlighted three breakthroughs listeners should watch closely: vision first picking robots for warehouses, mobile manipulators for flexible intralogistics, and the rapid march of humanoid robots from lab pilots to controlled factory deployments, a shift also underscored by the new humanoid benchmarking initiatives covered by multiple industry outlets. In logistics, Plus One Robotics recently raised 50 million dollars to pursue what it calls a 128 billion dollar opportunity in computer vision powered parcel handling, a sign that specialized, task focused robots are scaling fast in real world operations. Artificial intelligence is the new control stack. UiPath’s twenty twenty six Agentic Automation Trends report and analysis by Deloitte both describe a shift from simple scripted automation to “agentic” systems that can perceive, decide, and execute across workflows with minimal human intervention. Tom Snyder, writing for WRAL TechWire, notes that the real prize is not historical data but streaming sensor and machine data that lets robots adapt on the fly, turning factories and warehouses into living data systems. National University’s artificial intelligence statistics roundup suggests that economies fully leveraging artificial intelligence driven automation could see growth nearly twenty five percent higher than those relying on traditional automation alone, raising the stakes for manufacturers, logistics providers, and even small and mid sized enterprises. Strategically, listeners should focus on three action items. First, treat automation projects as data projects: invest in clean, connected operational data so robots and artificial intelligence systems can learn and improve. Second, pilot collaborative robots and vision systems in narrow, high value use cases such as palletizing, machine tending, or order picking, then scale once the metrics are proven. Third, watch the emerging “automation divide” Snyder describes, and benchmark your operations not against manual peers but against the most automated plants in your sector. Looking ahead, expect tighter integration between industrial robots, collaborative robots, and cloud artificial intelligence; more industry specific humanoid deployments in logistics and light manufacturing; and an accelerating wave of acquisitions, like Amazon’s recent purchase of humanoid startup Phonak Robotics, as major platforms race to own the robotics intelligence layer. Thank you for tuning in, and come back next week for more Robotics Industry Insider. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

12 de jun de 20263 min
episode Robots That Learn by Watching: Inside GMEX's Wild Pivot from Treadmills to Factory Brains artwork

Robots That Learn by Watching: Inside GMEX's Wild Pivot from Treadmills to Factory Brains

This is your Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. Industrial robotics is moving from scripted motion to what many engineers now call physical artificial intelligence, where machines perceive, reason, and adapt on the fly. At the 2026 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation in Vienna, organizers highlighted how physical artificial intelligence is reshaping industrial robots, shifting them from rigid, caged systems to agile platforms that can share workspaces with humans, adjust to variability, and even learn from demonstration, according to Robotics Industry Insider. On the breakthrough front, Genisom AI used that same conference to debut its full stack embodied intelligence lineup, including the Genisom M1 mobile base and L1 collaborative arms, integrating perception, planning, and control in a single software stack, as reported by Business Insider Markets. This kind of vertically integrated platform is a signal that the value is migrating from hardware alone to tightly coupled hardware and artificial intelligence. Industrial automation is accelerating alongside these advances. The Association for Advancing Automation notes that robot installations in manufacturing continue to grow, driven by labor shortages, quality demands, and around the clock production targets, with automotive, electronics, and logistics still leading deployments. According to a forecast discussed on the Robotics Industry Insider program, by 2026 roughly thirty percent of enterprises will automate more than half of their network and operational activities, up from under ten percent just a few years ago, a shift powered by so called agentic artificial intelligence systems that monitor, decide, and act without human in the loop for routine scenarios. A major strategic move comes from GMEX Robotics, which recently outlined a 2026 roadmap that pivots from fitness hardware into an embodied intelligence platform spanning industrial automation, logistics, and even resource exploration, as detailed in its May 2026 shareholder letter. GMEX plans new robotic products, a mid year beta of its robot brain platform, and at least one acquisition to accelerate its industrial offerings. For practitioners, the practical takeaways are clear. First, treat artificial intelligence as a core capability, not an add on: prioritize robots with unified perception to action stacks and strong simulation tools. Second, design factories and warehouses around hybrid teams of humans, industrial robots, and collaborative robots, rather than one off point automations. Third, invest early in data infrastructure and safety governance; as systems become more autonomous, traceability and fail safe design will be essential for compliance and trust. Looking ahead, listeners should expect tighter cloud edge integration for fleets of robots, broader use of large language models as robot interfaces and supervisors, and continued consolidation as software centric players acquire traditional robotics firms. Thank you for tuning in, and come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more from me check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

Ayer3 min
episode Robots Got Brains Now: GMEX Spills Tea on Their June Drop While Factories Ditch Old Bots for Chatty Smart Machines artwork

Robots Got Brains Now: GMEX Spills Tea on Their June Drop While Factories Ditch Old Bots for Chatty Smart Machines

This is your Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. Robotics and automation are moving into a more software-defined phase, where the biggest gains are coming from artificial intelligence, machine learning, and systems that can adapt in real time. According to the 2026 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation coverage referenced by Apple Podcasts, “physical AI” is reshaping industrial robots, especially in factories that want faster changeovers, better vision, and safer human-machine collaboration. The practical shift is clear: industrial robots are no longer just repeating fixed motions, they are being trained to perceive, plan, and adjust on the fly. One of the most interesting current developments comes from GMEX Robotics, which in a recent shareholder letter described a move from fitness hardware into an AI robotics platform built around embodied intelligence. Stock Titan reports that the company is planning new robotics technology for late June 2026, a beta launch of its robot “brain” in mid-July, and a first acquisition agreement by the end of the third quarter. That matters because it reflects a broader industry pattern: robotics firms are bundling hardware, software, and acquisitions to speed commercialization in logistics, industrial automation, and related markets. Another signal is the growing use of large-language-model-powered control and interface layers. Instead of programming every action manually, operators increasingly want robots that can understand natural-language instructions, support low-code setup, and integrate with factory data systems. That trend is especially important for collaborative robots, where ease of deployment often matters as much as raw payload or speed. Market momentum remains strong. Industry sources around automation conferences and startup funding show continued investment in robotics, industrial artificial intelligence, and collaborative systems, with companies chasing use cases in assembly, warehouse picking, inspection, and hazardous-environment operations. The business case is straightforward: higher uptime, lower labor bottlenecks, and more flexible production. For listeners tracking the sector, the practical takeaways are simple. Focus on pilots that combine vision, planning, and data integration. Look for vendors with strong software stacks, not only mechanical arms. And watch partnerships or acquisitions closely, because they are now a major shortcut to market access and technical capability. The future points toward robots that learn faster, deploy faster, and work more naturally alongside people, with industrial automation becoming less about fixed machinery and more about adaptive intelligent systems. Thanks for tuning in, come back next week for more, and this has been a Quiet Please production. For me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

10 de jun de 20263 min
episode Robots That Code Themselves and the AI Stack Taking Over Your Factory Floor artwork

Robots That Code Themselves and the AI Stack Taking Over Your Factory Floor

This is your Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. Industrial automation is accelerating into a new phase where artificial intelligence is no longer an add on but the core operating system of physical machines. At Nvidia GTC 2026, Nvidia positioned its full stack as the foundation for what it calls physical artificial intelligence, unveiling new Cosmos world models, Isaac humanoid systems and a Physical AI Data Factory blueprint that tightly couples simulation, data pipelines and deployment for robots on the factory floor and in logistics. The AI Insider reports that major robot makers such as ABB and Fanuc are integrating deeper with this stack to shorten time from design to deployment and to enable more adaptive behaviors in industrial and collaborative robots. Listeners watching the startup landscape should note the 2026 Automate Startup Challenge finalists, highlighted by the Association for Advancing Automation. One standout is a factory automation startup building artificial intelligence powered orchestration software that reads computer aided design files and then plans and executes robot tasks autonomously, removing much of the manual programming that has traditionally slowed deployment. This points to a future where industrial cells are configured by intent rather than line by line code. On the enterprise side, the Robotics Industry Insider show on Spreaker cites analyst forecasts that by 2026 roughly 30 percent of enterprises will automate more than half of their network and operations activities, up from under 10 percent in 2023, driven heavily by agentic artificial intelligence that can monitor, decide and act across fleets of robots and production assets. GlobalSpec’s preview of Automate 2026 notes that leaders from Siemens Digital Industries and Standard Bots are set to focus on how large foundation models are being embedded in robot controllers so cobots can adapt to new tasks with demonstration and natural language instructions instead of exhaustive reprogramming. In market strategy, a recent shareholder letter from GMEX Robotics, summarized by Stock Titan, outlines plans for mid 2026 launches in logistics and resource exploration robots, backed by targeted acquisitions to consolidate niche technologies like advanced sensing and edge inference. For practitioners, the practical takeaways are clear: prioritize platforms that combine simulation with real world data, invest in orchestration layers that can coordinate mixed fleets of industrial and collaborative robots and start pilot projects where artificial intelligence handles exception management, not just repetitive motion. Looking ahead, listeners should expect tighter cloud to edge integration, more humanoid form factors in industrial settings and growing pressure to standardize safety and interoperability as robots become more autonomous and more collaborative with human workers. Thanks for tuning in, and come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and to find me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

9 de jun de 20263 min
episode Robots That Learn From TikTok Videos and Amazon's Robot Shopping Spree: AI Gets Physical on the Factory Floor artwork

Robots That Learn From TikTok Videos and Amazon's Robot Shopping Spree: AI Gets Physical on the Factory Floor

This is your Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. Industrial robotics is moving from isolated metal arms to fleets of intelligent, collaborative machines that learn, adapt, and increasingly manage themselves on the factory floor. According to the International Federation of Robotics, global industrial robot installations reached roughly 540,000 units in 2024, more than double a decade ago, with Asia leading growth and strong momentum in automotive, electronics, and logistics. International Federation of Robotics data also shows robot density in manufacturing topping 400 robots per 10,000 workers in leading economies, underscoring how automation is becoming core infrastructure rather than a niche investment. On the technology front, The Robot Report highlights Rhoda AI’s FutureVision system, which trains robots from video rather than painstakingly coded instructions, an example of physical artificial intelligence where robots learn by watching and simulating the real world. Nvidia’s National Robotics Week coverage similarly showcases world models and foundation models that let robots understand three dimensional spaces, predict how objects move, and perform delicate tasks such as flexible bin picking and collaborative assembly. In current news, The Robot Report notes that Rhoda AI closed a significant Series A round to scale its robot intelligence software for logistics and light manufacturing, while Amazon’s recent acquisition of humanoid developer Phonak Robotics signals that general purpose warehouse and logistics robots are moving closer to large scale deployment. Automation.com’s latest issue on industrial operations reports that multi agent artificial intelligence systems are now orchestrating fleets of mobile and collaborative robots, scheduling tasks, monitoring health, and balancing workloads across lines and plants. For near term action, Automate Show analysts advise manufacturers to start with one repeatable win such as robotic palletizing or machine tending, define and stabilize the process before automating it, and treat safety and governance as part of the design, not an afterthought. UiPath’s 2026 trends report adds that combining artificial intelligence agents with robots can automate entire workflows, from reading orders to dispatching mobile robots, but good, clean operational data is the prerequisite. Looking ahead, qBotica and IBM trend briefings point to multi agent orchestration, physical artificial intelligence, and edge reasoning as the big themes: swarms of specialized agents coordinating robots in real time, robots that learn in simulation, and compact models running directly on controllers and sensors. That mix will push robots beyond cages into every part of operations and blur the line between software automation and physical automation. Thanks for tuning in to Robotics Industry Insider. Come back next week for more on artificial intelligence and automation. This has been a Quiet Please production, and to find more from me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

8 de jun de 20263 min