『Robots on Wheels Take Over Siemens While FANUC Teaches Machines to Chat and Foxconn Goes Full Sci-Fi』のカバーアート

Robots on Wheels Take Over Siemens While FANUC Teaches Machines to Chat and Foxconn Goes Full Sci-Fi

Robots on Wheels Take Over Siemens While FANUC Teaches Machines to Chat and Foxconn Goes Full Sci-Fi

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This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast.

Welcome to Robotics Industry Insider: AI and Automation News. Humanoid and Siemens just completed a groundbreaking proof of concept, deploying Humanoid's HMND 01 wheeled Alpha robot in real logistics operations at a Siemens facility, paving the way for broader humanoid integration in factories, according to a January 15 announcement from Robotics Tomorrow. Meanwhile, FANUC highlights AI-driven robotics as a top 2026 trend, enabling voice control, adaptive motion, and safer human-robot collaboration via digital twins, as detailed in Controls Drives and Automation.

The industrial automation market, valued at 221.64 billion dollars in 2025 per Mordor Intelligence, is projected to hit 325.51 billion by 2030 with a 7.99 percent compound annual growth rate, fueled by Asia-Pacific's 43.4 percent share and demand for flexible cobots in automotive and pharmaceuticals. AI integration shines in smart, scalable systems—think FANUC's partnerships with NVIDIA for physical AI on open ROS 2 platforms—while Roland Berger forecasts six to seven percent growth in robot installations through 2030.

Picture Foxconn's AI-powered robotic workforce using digital twins to tackle labor shortages, or Caterpillar teaming with Nvidia for AI-enhanced factories, as reported by Manufacturing Dive. These case studies show modular automation slashing costs by up to 50 percent through repetitive task handling.

For practical takeaways, manufacturers should pilot Robots-as-a-Service models to test humanoids without heavy upfront costs, and prioritize IT-OT convergence for versatile deployments. Looking ahead, expect manufacturing to drive adoption amid nearshoring, with humanoids evolving toward production-grade reliability by decade's end, per International Federation of Robotics trends.

Thank you 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.


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