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Wheeled humanoids typically struggle with stairs and complex terrain, but Paxini’s TORA-DOUBLE ONE appears to be solving this problem. It just demonstrated clearing a 21.5 cm (~8.5 inch) obstacle. This capability is a significant step forward, greatly enhancing the practical value of wheeled robots.

12,751 просмотров • 7 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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Most humanoid projects talk about real work. Very few last an hour on a real line. This week I saw a case that matters for anyone building robots, perception, or physical AI. Kinisi deployed its first mobile manipulation system into a live recycling facility. Not a demo. Not a staged test. A real production line with real output pressure. Why this matters if you want robotics to deliver real value on your floor: • Handles mixed glass with random poses and no fixed fixtures. • Runs real grasp selection under noise, vibration and production variability. • Maintains throughput while avoiding breakage on a delicate material. • Shows mobile manipulation doing actual shift work instead of controlled lab runs. Kinisi published a video that shows what the robot sees and how sensor data turns into action. This is the part most teams struggle to explain to customers, so the educational angle is useful for anyone working on adoption. On top of this, the team signed a pilot with a global automotive manufacturer to explore humanoid use cases in production. The direction is clear. Wheeled mobility (not legs!) plus strong perception seems to be shaping a large part of industrial humanoids right now. I know Brennand from earlier conversations and from our podcast session, and I am always glad to see European teams push the category forward. Wishing the Kinisi team continued success. —- Weekly robotics and AI insights. Subscribe free:

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24,743 просмотров • 7 месяцев назад