Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News

PODCAST · technology

Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News

Stay ahead in the fast-evolving world of robotics and automation with Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News. This daily podcast delivers the latest updates, insights, and trends in AI, robotics technology, and automation. Whether you're an industry professional or an enthusiast, tune in for expert analysis and interviews that keep you informed and inspired. Discover the future of tech with Robotics Industry Insider.For more info go to https://www.quietplease.aiCheck out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjsThis show includes AI-generated content.

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    Robots Hit 38 Billion While NVIDIA Teaches Them to Actually Listen and China Plots 9 Trillion Dollar Humanoid Takeover

    This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. Welcome to Robotics Industry Insider: AI and Automation News. The global robotics market hit 38 billion dollars in 2026, surging 34 percent year over year, the fastest growth in a decade, according to the State of Robotics 2026 Report. Factory and warehouse robots now drive 60 to 65 percent of this expansion, fueled by re-shoring manufacturing, e-commerce booms, and labor shortages. NVIDIA's announcements at GTC and National Robotics Week spotlight breakthroughs in physical AI. Their new Isaac GR00T open models let robots grasp natural language instructions for complex tasks via vision language action reasoning. Cosmos world models generate synthetic data for scalable training, while Newton 1.0 physics engine and Isaac Sim 6.0 enable precise simulations of dexterous manipulation. Vision-language-action adoption has tripled to 40 percent of new deployments, with quantized models running at 10 to 25 hertz on consumer GPUs for real-time use. In industrial automation, semiconductor fabs are shifting to flexible systems, retasking arms in hours for wafer handling and inspections, thanks to sub-Newton torque sensing. Humanoid robots are pivotal too: twelve commercial platforms are available, with teleoperation data costs down 60 percent to 118 dollars per hour, making enterprise pilots viable. RBC Capital Markets projects a nine trillion dollar humanoid market by 2050, led by China at 61 percent share, starting in warehouses before household tasks. A key partnership: NVIDIA's cloud-to-robot workflow accelerates from simulation to deployment. Case in point, high-precision manufacturing now uses reprogrammable arms, unlocking new efficiencies. Practical takeaway: Enterprises, budget 50 thousand to 150 thousand dollars for pilot data collection and test vision-language-action models to cut reprogramming time. Watch humanoid hardware commoditization, with sub-10 thousand dollar arms proliferating. Looking ahead, imitation learning overtakes reinforcement learning, and software ecosystems could add three trillion dollars via app stores. Humanoids may outpace car production in units, transforming industries. Thanks for tuning in, listeners. Come back next week for more. 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

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    Robots Run Faster Than Humans Now and Tesla is Ditching Cars for Humanoid Factories

    This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. Welcome to Robotics Industry Insider: AI and Automation News. Imagine a humanoid robot shattering the human half-marathon world record—that's Flash from Honor, as shown in recent What The Future coverage, proving physical AI is racing ahead in breakthrough robotics technologies. Tesla's Optimus Gen 3 upgrade steals the spotlight with tendon-driven hands offering human-like dexterity and force feedback, far beyond Gen 2's 22 degrees of freedom, according to Evolving AI reports. Tesla plans to convert its Fremont Model S and X line into an Optimus production hub by early 2026, ramping up industrial robot output despite current research and development status. Hyperautomation merges artificial intelligence with robotic process automation for end-to-end workflows, with Hostinger forecasting that 30 percent of enterprises will automate over half their network activities by 2026, and 90 percent of large firms prioritizing it. CES 2026 highlighted physical AI, where analytical and generative models enable robots to learn via simulations for industrial, supply chain, and collaborative roles—57 percent of automakers now plan cobot deployments for flexible assembly. Market data from Novus Hi-Tech projects the global robotics sector surpassing 70 to 80 billion dollars by 2026, led by factory and warehouse automation at 60 to 65 percent of growth, fueled by reshoring and e-commerce. NVIDIA's National Robotics Week updates underscore AI integration advancing physical world applications. Practical takeaway: Businesses, audit workflows for hyperautomation pilots using agentic AI like Salesforce Agentforce to cut manual tasks by 50 percent. Watch for partnerships in AI-optimized hardware to stay competitive. Looking ahead, expect humanoid collaborators dominating factories, with ethical AI ensuring workforce transitions—global AI adoption hits 63 percent in three years per Hostinger, boosting growth 25 percent. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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    Robots Gone Wild: Tesla's New Bot, SoftBank's 100B IPO Dream, and Why Your Factory Job Just Got Interesting

    This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. Welcome to Robotics Industry Insider: AI and Automation News. The global robotics market hit 38 billion dollars in 2026, surging 34 percent year-over-year, the fastest growth in a decade, according to the State of Robotics 2026 Report. This boom stems from hardware commoditization, with fourteen manufacturers offering robotic arms under ten thousand dollars, and twelve commercial humanoid platforms now available. Elon Musk announced Tesla Bot Generation 3 plans, sparking talk of a cottage industry for integrating these robots into factories, as covered in Tesla Car World updates. RoboForce secured 52 million dollars in funding to scale physical AI for labor tasks, while ANK Robotics raised 8 million dollars for airport mobility tech, per the April 2026 Robotics Recap from Robotics247. SoftBank launched Roze AI, deploying autonomous robots to build data centers and eyeing a 100 billion dollar initial public offering, TechCrunch reports. AI integration shines in Vision-Language-Action models, now powering 40 percent of new deployments, enabling robots to handle unseen tasks via imitation learning. Physical Intelligence's new robot brain exemplifies this, figuring out novel assignments without prior training. In industry, GFT Technologies released AI-powered assembly lines that detect defective automotive parts, and Fanuc debuted the CRX-3IA collaborative robot lineup with enhanced capabilities. Semiconductor fabs now retask arms in hours for wafer handling, boosting flexible automation. Multi-agent systems, a top 2026 trend from FPT Software and Microsoft, orchestrate AI agents for complex workflows like patient monitoring. Practical takeaway: Enterprises, pilot Vision-Language-Action robots with teleoperation data budgets under 150 thousand dollars to cut costs 60 percent from 2024 levels. Looking ahead, AI superfactories and agentic automation will redefine oversight, pushing humans toward creativity amid exploding humanoid adoption. Thanks for tuning in, listeners. Come back next week for more. 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

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    Robots Just Had Their ChatGPT Moment and Theyre Coming for Your Factory Floor Honey

    This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. Welcome to Robotics Industry Insider: AI and Automation News. Factory robots are propelling the global robotics market toward 70 to 80 billion dollars by year-end, with industrial and warehouse automation driving 60 to 65 percent of growth, according to Novus Hi-Tech. This boom reflects reshoring, e-commerce demands, worker shortages, and wage pressures. Physical AI has hit its ChatGPT moment, as Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang declared at GTC 2026, enabling robots to perceive, reason, and act in unstructured environments. Hyundai Motor Group debuted its Atlas humanoid for production lines, planning gradual factory rollouts, while BMW and Audi pilot similar systems. ABB Group sold its robotics division to SoftBank, signaling consolidation, per Manufacturing Dive and BizInsider reports. Collaborative robots, or cobots, shipped over 210,000 units in the last four quarters, valuing the market at 11.3 billion dollars with 28 percent annual growth; experts predict cobots will outpace traditional industrial robots by 2028, according to Beroe Inc. AI vision systems top priorities for 41 percent of manufacturers, per the Association for Advancing Automation. In quality control, 57 percent of automakers use cobots for flexible assembly, and half deploy AI for inspections. GrayMatter Robotics opened its 100,000 square foot headquarters, showcasing AI-powered systems for autonomous sanding and grinding on FANUC platforms. Precedence Research pegs the industrial automation market at 280 billion dollars this year, doubling by 2035. Practical takeaways: Audit workflows for hyperautomation to slash manual tasks by 50 percent, pilot AI vision cobots to cut defects by 20 percent, and upskill teams in physical AI integration. Looking ahead, humanoid robots enter factories late this year, per industry trackers, with 9 percent compound annual growth through smarter fleets and cybersecurity mandates reshaping labor. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me, check out Quiet Please Dot AI. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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    Robots Just Had Their ChatGPT Moment and Theyre Coming for Your Factory Floor Honey

    This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. Welcome to Robotics Industry Insider: AI and Automation News. The robotics sector is surging, with Statista reporting the global market at 24.6 billion dollars in 2025 and AI robotics at 13.78 billion dollars, poised for 27.14 percent annual growth through 2031. Industrial automation hits 233.6 billion dollars this year per Research Nester, projected to reach 533 billion by 2035 at 9.5 percent compound annual growth. Physical AI marks the breakthrough, as Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang declared its ChatGPT moment, enabling robots to perceive, reason, and act in real factories. Hyundai Motor Group debuted its Atlas humanoid for production lines, with BMW and Audi piloting similar units for complex tasks. GrayMatter Robotics unveiled a 100,000 square foot headquarters in Carson, California, featuring AI-powered cells on FANUC platforms for autonomous sanding and grinding using physics-informed GMR-AI, no programming required. ABB Robotics at SLAS 2026 showcased its Autonomous Versatile Robotics platform, partnering with Agilent for lab workflows like pipetting. AI integration powers collaborative robots with edge vision from LMI Technologies Gocator cameras for zero-defect inspection, while Rockwell Automation rolls out predictive maintenance to slash downtime by 20 percent. Articulated robots dominate automotive, and fleets of autonomous mobile robots orchestrate warehouses, as Amazon's Sequoia system cuts inventory time by 75 percent. For insiders, practical takeaway: Audit lines for IoT sensors and pilot cobots in high-mix automotive tasks to boost productivity fivefold, per the International Trade Administration. Upgrade existing plants with AI software layers for quick returns. Looking ahead, humanoids fill labor gaps, Asia Pacific leads at 39 percent market share, and 6G-enhanced AI drives swarming fleets, doubling automation by 2030 according to PwC. Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for me, check out Quiet Please Dot AI. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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    Robots Rocking the Factory Floor: AI's Automation Domination

    This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. The robotics and automation sector continues its rapid transformation, with industrial robots and AI-driven systems at the forefront of global manufacturing’s evolution. By the end of 2025, the industrial robotics market is expected to reach approximately 27 billion US dollars, ultimately soaring to more than 84 billion by 2034, driven by double-digit annual growth. Most of this expansion is happening in the Asia-Pacific region, especially in China, Japan, and South Korea, where robot density in factories has hit record highs and automation adoption is becoming essential for remaining globally competitive. In North America, the robotics and industrial automation market is also posting strong returns, with the United States emerging as a leader in customized automation solutions for everything from logistics to advanced electronics manufacturing. On the technology front, collaborative robots, or cobots, are transforming the shop floor by allowing humans and smart machines to safely work side by side. AI is playing a pivotal role, not just in manufacturing robots but also in powering real-time data analysis, predictive maintenance, and adaptive process control. These advances support a growing trend toward interconnected smart factories, where platforms like Industrial Internet of Things, edge computing, and integrated cloud analytics improve quality, speed, and uptime. Companies that invest in such automation consistently report productivity boosts and, on average, a 22 percent reduction in operating costs. Listeners should note several important recent industry developments. According to the International Federation of Robotics, global robot installations in factories are slated to increase by 6 percent in 2025, surpassing 575,000 new units in a single year. Major automakers and electronics firms are deepening R&D partnerships to build highly adaptable modular robotics systems, while technology companies are fresh off a wave of recent mergers and acquisitions aimed at tightening integration between AI platforms and physical automation hardware. Notably, one U.S.-based robotics leader announced a new sensor suite this week that allows robots to dynamically adjust to real-time variance on assembly lines, cutting changeover times by half. For businesses evaluating next steps, practical takeaways include prioritizing upskilling the workforce for human-robot collaboration, investing in scalable automation and sensor-integrated platforms, and closely monitoring supply chain automation opportunities. The most successful adopters are those who combine investment in technology with agile operational strategies. Looking ahead, the convergence of artificial intelligence, robotics, and industrial automation will likely continue to reshape job roles, industry partnerships, and the pace of innovation. As always, thanks for tuning in to Robotics Industry Insider. Come back next week for m

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    Robots Gone Wild: AI Takes Over the Factory Floor!

    This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast. As we approach the end of 2024, the robotics industry continues to evolve at a rapid pace, driven by advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) and automation technologies. Industrial robots, once limited to simple and monotonous tasks, are now capable of performing complex operations thanks to AI integration. This shift has significantly improved manufacturing efficiency and quality control. One of the breakthrough robotics technologies making waves is AI-enabled robotics, which allows robots to learn like humans and automate tasks that were previously impossible to automate. Eugen Solowjow, head of research group at Siemens, emphasizes the potential of AI-enabled robotics to transform traditional manufacturing by enhancing flexibility and efficiency[1]. The International Federation of Robotics (IFR) reports that the global robotics market is experiencing unprecedented growth, with 4,281,585 industrial robots operating in factories worldwide, an increase of 10% from the previous year. Asia leads the way, accounting for 70% of all newly deployed robots in 2023[2]. Industry experts are optimistic about the future of AI-enabled robotics. Katja Gaiser, Vice President Global Operations & Supply Chain at Komax Group, highlights the importance of integrating AI and robotics into processes to build a robust foundation for future automation enhancements. Jochen Mohn, General Manager at Hexagon, is working on creating a smart, sustainable factory that showcases full automation and AI integration[3]. Bill Gates notes that AI is as revolutionary as personal computers, mobile phones, and the Internet, and its impact on manufacturing will be profound. He emphasizes the need for continuous learning and upskilling to navigate the transition to AI-driven manufacturing[4]. In terms of market applications, AI-driven robots are being used to optimize material usage, reduce waste, and increase efficiency in manufacturing operations. These systems are also enabling collaborative work between humans and robots, improving overall productivity[5]. Looking ahead, the future of robotics and automation is bright. With further advances in AI and reduced hardware costs, we can expect to see even more innovative applications of robotics in manufacturing. As the industry continues to evolve, it is essential for companies to invest in upskilling and reskilling their workforce to remain competitive. Practical takeaways for industry professionals include: - Investing in AI-enabled robotics to enhance manufacturing efficiency and quality control - Upskilling and reskilling the workforce to navigate the transition to AI-driven manufacturing - Building a robust foundation for future automation enhancements by integrating AI and robotics into processes As we move into 2025, the robotics industry is poised for continued growth and innovation, driven by the integration of AI and automation technologies. St

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Stay ahead in the fast-evolving world of robotics and automation with Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News. This daily podcast delivers the latest updates, insights, and trends in AI, robotics technology, and automation. Whether you're an industry professional or an enthusiast, tune in for expert analysis and interviews that keep you informed and inspired. Discover the future of tech with Robotics Industry Insider.For more info go to https://www.quietplease.aiCheck out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjsThis show includes AI-generated content.

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Inception Point Ai

Produced by Quiet. Please

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