Remove 2025 Remove Article Remove Robotics
article thumbnail

Teradyne robotics group lays off 10% of global staff

Robotics Business Review

Source: Universal Robots Economic uncertainty has taken a toll on the robotics industry, including leading vendors. ’s robotics group laid off 10% of its global workforce this week. However, Teradyne Robotics says on its website that it has 1,400+ employees worldwide. Teradyne Inc.’s based company.

Robotics 128
article thumbnail

Top Trends in 2025

Automation Mag

While the end of 2024 suggested a growing focus on humanoid robotics and further advancements in AI, automation technologies have taken a backseat in current plans for Canadian manufacturers. He works with companies in robotics, automation, manufacturing, packaging and capital equipment on branding, marketing and search engine strategies.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Intuitive da Vinci procedures increased by 17% in 2024

Robotics Business Review

Da Vinci systems offer surgeons high-definition 3D vision, a magnified view, and robotic and computer assistance. this week announced preliminary fourth-quarter results that highlight significant da Vinci surgical robot procedure growth. Editor’s note: This article was syndicated from The Robot Report sibling site MassDevice.

Robotics 103
article thumbnail

Building a universal robotics platform with BOW

Robotics Business Review

BOW is a University of Sheffield spinout designing a robotics platform that aims to simplify the development of robotic applications. Thompson and Camilleri discuss the challenges in the robotics industry, the features of the BOW software development kit (SDK), and the company’s business model. by the end of 2025.

article thumbnail

NVIDIA heralds ‘physical AI’ era with Cosmos platform launch

Robotics Business Review

Instead of producing text, it produces action tokens How is this different from traditional robotics? Traditional robots are typically pre-programmed to perform specific, repetitive tasks in controlled environments. That is a very sensible thing for the future of robotics, and the technology is right around the corner.

Robotics 122
article thumbnail

The Shift Toward Smarter Shops: Real-World Stories of Data-Driven Manufacturing

Modern Machine Shop

When these slow-moving robots are activated in the coming months, they will serve as active transport systems, using optical navigation and laser scanning technologies to guide DMG MORI’s universal turning centers through different stages of the assembly process. Robots and cobots are nearly ubiquitous.

article thumbnail

RobotLAB expands product portfolio with Vision Aerial partnership

Robotics Business Review

which offers robots as a service, or RaaS, is now selling and servicing drones from Vision Aerial. based drone manufacturer is the first of its kind to join RobotLAB’s portfolio, which currently includes mobile robots for restaurants, hospitality, floor scrubbing, and sidewalk delivery. RobotLAB Inc., The Bozeman, Mont.-based