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BES00738106_000010
Le constructeur automobile sud-coréen Hyundai prévoit de déployer 30 000 robots humanoïdes dans ses usines d'ici deux ans
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years, The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas. The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments. Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time. An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated. The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030. Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites. The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments. They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration. Picture supplied by JLPPA
(c) Dukas - Online: Double Fee! -
BES00738106_000009
Le constructeur automobile sud-coréen Hyundai prévoit de déployer 30 000 robots humanoïdes dans ses usines d'ici deux ans
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years, The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas. The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments. Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time. An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated. The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030. Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites. The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments. They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration. Picture supplied by JLPPA
(c) Dukas - Online: Double Fee! -
BES00738106_000008
Le constructeur automobile sud-coréen Hyundai prévoit de déployer 30 000 robots humanoïdes dans ses usines d'ici deux ans
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years, The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas. The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments. Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time. An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated. The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030. Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites. The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments. They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration. Picture supplied by JLPPA
(c) Dukas - Online: Double Fee! -
BES00738106_000007
Le constructeur automobile sud-coréen Hyundai prévoit de déployer 30 000 robots humanoïdes dans ses usines d'ici deux ans
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years, The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas. The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments. Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time. An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated. The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030. Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites. The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments. They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration. Picture supplied by JLPPA
(c) Dukas - Online: Double Fee! -
BES00738106_000006
Le constructeur automobile sud-coréen Hyundai prévoit de déployer 30 000 robots humanoïdes dans ses usines d'ici deux ans
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years, The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas. The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments. Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time. An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated. The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030. Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites. The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments. They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration. Picture supplied by JLPPA
(c) Dukas - Online: Double Fee! -
BES00738106_000005
Le constructeur automobile sud-coréen Hyundai prévoit de déployer 30 000 robots humanoïdes dans ses usines d'ici deux ans
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years, The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas. The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments. Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time. An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated. The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030. Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites. The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments. They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration. Picture supplied by JLPPA
(c) Dukas - Online: Double Fee! -
BES00738106_000004
Le constructeur automobile sud-coréen Hyundai prévoit de déployer 30 000 robots humanoïdes dans ses usines d'ici deux ans
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years, The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas. The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments. Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time. An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated. The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030. Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites. The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments. They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration. Picture supplied by JLPPA
(c) Dukas - Online: Double Fee! -
BES00738106_000003
Le constructeur automobile sud-coréen Hyundai prévoit de déployer 30 000 robots humanoïdes dans ses usines d'ici deux ans
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years, The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas. The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments. Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time. An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated. The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030. Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites. The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments. They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration. Picture supplied by JLPPA
(c) Dukas - Online: Double Fee! -
BES00738106_000002
Le constructeur automobile sud-coréen Hyundai prévoit de déployer 30 000 robots humanoïdes dans ses usines d'ici deux ans
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years, The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas. The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments. Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time. An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated. The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030. Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites. The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments. They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration. Picture supplied by JLPPA
(c) Dukas - Online: Double Fee! -
BES00738106_000001
Le constructeur automobile sud-coréen Hyundai prévoit de déployer 30 000 robots humanoïdes dans ses usines d'ici deux ans
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years, The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas. The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments. Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time. An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated. The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030. Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites. The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments. They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration. Picture supplied by JLPPA
(c) Dukas - Online: Double Fee! -
DUKAS_192465345_FER
Hyundai plans 30,000 car plant humanoid robots
Ferrari Press Agency
Robot 1
Ref 17443
06/01/2026
See Ferrari pictures
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics
South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years,
The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas.
The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments.
Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time.
An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated.
The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030.
Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites.
The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments.
They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration.
OPS: Render showing how the new version. of the Boston Dynamics Atlas robot would be integrated into a Hyundai car plant.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_192465335_FER
Hyundai plans 30,000 car plant humanoid robots
Ferrari Press Agency
Robot 1
Ref 17443
06/01/2026
See Ferrari pictures
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics
South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years,
The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas.
The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments.
Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time.
An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated.
The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030.
Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites.
The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments.
They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration.
OPS: Render showing how the new version. of the Boston Dynamics Atlas robot would be integrated into a Hyundai car plant.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_192465325_FER
Hyundai plans 30,000 car plant humanoid robots
Ferrari Press Agency
Robot 1
Ref 17443
06/01/2026
See Ferrari pictures
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics
South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years,
The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas.
The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments.
Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time.
An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated.
The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030.
Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites.
The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments.
They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration.
OPS: The new version of the Boston Dynamics Atlas robot being readied for Hyundai car plant.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_192465315_FER
Hyundai plans 30,000 car plant humanoid robots
Ferrari Press Agency
Robot 1
Ref 17443
06/01/2026
See Ferrari pictures
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics
South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years,
The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas.
The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments.
Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time.
An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated.
The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030.
Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites.
The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments.
They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration.
OPS: The new version of the Boston Dynamics Atlas robot being readied for Hyundai car plant.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_192465305_FER
Hyundai plans 30,000 car plant humanoid robots
Ferrari Press Agency
Robot 1
Ref 17443
06/01/2026
See Ferrari pictures
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics
South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years,
The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas.
The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments.
Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time.
An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated.
The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030.
Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites.
The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments.
They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration.
OPS: Render showing how the new version. of the Boston Dynamics Atlas robot would be integrated into a Hyundai car plant.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_192465295_FER
Hyundai plans 30,000 car plant humanoid robots
Ferrari Press Agency
Robot 1
Ref 17443
06/01/2026
See Ferrari pictures
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics
South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years,
The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas.
The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments.
Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time.
An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated.
The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030.
Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites.
The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments.
They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration.
OPS: Render showing how the new version. of the Boston Dynamics Atlas robot would be integrated into a Hyundai car plant.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_192465285_FER
Hyundai plans 30,000 car plant humanoid robots
Ferrari Press Agency
Robot 1
Ref 17443
06/01/2026
See Ferrari pictures
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics
South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years,
The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas.
The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments.
Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time.
An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated.
The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030.
Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites.
The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments.
They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration.
OPS: Render showing how the new version. of the Boston Dynamics Atlas robot would be integrated into a Hyundai car plant.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_192465275_FER
Hyundai plans 30,000 car plant humanoid robots
Ferrari Press Agency
Robot 1
Ref 17443
06/01/2026
See Ferrari pictures
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics
South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years,
The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas.
The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments.
Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time.
An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated.
The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030.
Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites.
The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments.
They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration.
OPS: Render showing how the new version. of the Boston Dynamics Atlas robot would be integrated into a Hyundai car plant.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_192465265_FER
Hyundai plans 30,000 car plant humanoid robots
Ferrari Press Agency
Robot 1
Ref 17443
06/01/2026
See Ferrari pictures
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics
South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years,
The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas.
The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments.
Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time.
An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated.
The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030.
Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites.
The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments.
They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration.
OPS: Render showing how the new version. of the Boston Dynamics Atlas robot would be integrated into a Hyundai car plant.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_192465255_FER
Hyundai plans 30,000 car plant humanoid robots
Ferrari Press Agency
Robot 1
Ref 17443
06/01/2026
See Ferrari pictures
Pictures MUST credit: Boston Dynamics
South Korean car maker Hyundai plans to have 30,000 humanoid robots in its factories within two years,
The automaker has unveiled a production version of a humanoid robot by US subsidiary Boston Dynamics called Atlas.
The company plans to transition to AI-driven systems as part of its broader vision for factory environments.
Hyundai aims to have robots that can work with people, be easily trained, and continue to improve over time.
An army of Atlas humanoid robots is expected to begin working on parts sequencing tasks in 2028, gradually expanding into more complex duties after safety and quality benefits are validated.
The Atlas robots will work on component assembly by 2030.
Beyond that date robots may be deployed for tasks involving heavy loads, repetitive motions, and complex operations across production sites.
The robots are designed to reduce physical strain on workers by handling high-risk and repetitive tasks, while also laying the foundation for broader commercial adoption in industrial environments.
They can adapt to evolving needs while improving efficiency and collaboration.
OPS: Render showing how the new version. of the Boston Dynamics Atlas robot would be integrated into a Hyundai car plant.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUK10167995_002
FEATURE - Rise of the Autobots: Dieses Jahr werden 30000 hochentwickelte Androiden vom Typ Atlas in den Arbeitseinsatz gehen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Pioneering robotics firm Boston Dynamics has unveiled its latest Atlas humanoid robot and announced that 30,000 will be working in Hyundai factories across the world.
The unveiling occurred at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday during a live demonstration of a prototype Atlas and a choreographed performance by several of the company’s Spot robots.
Production of the new Atlas robots, which incorporate advanced AI, will begin immediately at Boston Dynamics’ headquarters in Boston.
All 30,000 deployments for 2026 have already been allocated, with initial fleets due to be shipped to Hyundai’s Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and to Google DeepMind in the coming months. New customers can receive the robots from early 2027.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” said Robert Playter, chief executive of Boston Dynamics. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionise the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children–useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Atlas is designed as an enterprise-grade humanoid robot capable of carrying out a wide range of industrial tasks, including material handling and order fulfilment. According to the company, it can learn new tasks quickly, adapt to changing environments and operate autonomously with minimal supervision. When its battery runs low, the robot can navigate to a charging station, replace its own battery and resume work without human intervention.
The robot can be integrated with manufacturing execution systems and warehouse management systems using Boston Dynamics’ Orbit software. Once a task is learned by one robot, it can be replicated across an entire fleet.
Atlas can operate autonomously, be controlled remot *** Local C
(c) Dukas -
DUK10167995_003
FEATURE - Rise of the Autobots: Dieses Jahr werden 30000 hochentwickelte Androiden vom Typ Atlas in den Arbeitseinsatz gehen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Pioneering robotics firm Boston Dynamics has unveiled its latest Atlas humanoid robot and announced that 30,000 will be working in Hyundai factories across the world.
The unveiling occurred at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday during a live demonstration of a prototype Atlas and a choreographed performance by several of the company’s Spot robots.
Production of the new Atlas robots, which incorporate advanced AI, will begin immediately at Boston Dynamics’ headquarters in Boston.
All 30,000 deployments for 2026 have already been allocated, with initial fleets due to be shipped to Hyundai’s Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and to Google DeepMind in the coming months. New customers can receive the robots from early 2027.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” said Robert Playter, chief executive of Boston Dynamics. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionise the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children–useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Atlas is designed as an enterprise-grade humanoid robot capable of carrying out a wide range of industrial tasks, including material handling and order fulfilment. According to the company, it can learn new tasks quickly, adapt to changing environments and operate autonomously with minimal supervision. When its battery runs low, the robot can navigate to a charging station, replace its own battery and resume work without human intervention.
The robot can be integrated with manufacturing execution systems and warehouse management systems using Boston Dynamics’ Orbit software. Once a task is learned by one robot, it can be replicated across an entire fleet.
Atlas can operate autonomously, be controlled remot *** Local C
(c) Dukas -
DUK10167995_001
FEATURE - Rise of the Autobots: Dieses Jahr werden 30000 hochentwickelte Androiden vom Typ Atlas in den Arbeitseinsatz gehen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Pioneering robotics firm Boston Dynamics has unveiled its latest Atlas humanoid robot and announced that 30,000 will be working in Hyundai factories across the world.
The unveiling occurred at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday during a live demonstration of a prototype Atlas and a choreographed performance by several of the company’s Spot robots.
Production of the new Atlas robots, which incorporate advanced AI, will begin immediately at Boston Dynamics’ headquarters in Boston.
All 30,000 deployments for 2026 have already been allocated, with initial fleets due to be shipped to Hyundai’s Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and to Google DeepMind in the coming months. New customers can receive the robots from early 2027.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” said Robert Playter, chief executive of Boston Dynamics. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionise the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children–useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Atlas is designed as an enterprise-grade humanoid robot capable of carrying out a wide range of industrial tasks, including material handling and order fulfilment. According to the company, it can learn new tasks quickly, adapt to changing environments and operate autonomously with minimal supervision. When its battery runs low, the robot can navigate to a charging station, replace its own battery and resume work without human intervention.
The robot can be integrated with manufacturing execution systems and warehouse management systems using Boston Dynamics’ Orbit software. Once a task is learned by one robot, it can be replicated across an entire fleet.
Atlas can operate autonomously, be controlled remot *** Local C
(c) Dukas -
DUK10167995_005
FEATURE - Rise of the Autobots: Dieses Jahr werden 30000 hochentwickelte Androiden vom Typ Atlas in den Arbeitseinsatz gehen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Pioneering robotics firm Boston Dynamics has unveiled its latest Atlas humanoid robot and announced that 30,000 will be working in Hyundai factories across the world.
The unveiling occurred at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday during a live demonstration of a prototype Atlas and a choreographed performance by several of the company’s Spot robots.
Production of the new Atlas robots, which incorporate advanced AI, will begin immediately at Boston Dynamics’ headquarters in Boston.
All 30,000 deployments for 2026 have already been allocated, with initial fleets due to be shipped to Hyundai’s Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and to Google DeepMind in the coming months. New customers can receive the robots from early 2027.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” said Robert Playter, chief executive of Boston Dynamics. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionise the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children–useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Atlas is designed as an enterprise-grade humanoid robot capable of carrying out a wide range of industrial tasks, including material handling and order fulfilment. According to the company, it can learn new tasks quickly, adapt to changing environments and operate autonomously with minimal supervision. When its battery runs low, the robot can navigate to a charging station, replace its own battery and resume work without human intervention.
The robot can be integrated with manufacturing execution systems and warehouse management systems using Boston Dynamics’ Orbit software. Once a task is learned by one robot, it can be replicated across an entire fleet.
Atlas can operate autonomously, be controlled remot *** Local C
(c) Dukas -
DUK10167995_004
FEATURE - Rise of the Autobots: Dieses Jahr werden 30000 hochentwickelte Androiden vom Typ Atlas in den Arbeitseinsatz gehen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Pioneering robotics firm Boston Dynamics has unveiled its latest Atlas humanoid robot and announced that 30,000 will be working in Hyundai factories across the world.
The unveiling occurred at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday during a live demonstration of a prototype Atlas and a choreographed performance by several of the company’s Spot robots.
Production of the new Atlas robots, which incorporate advanced AI, will begin immediately at Boston Dynamics’ headquarters in Boston.
All 30,000 deployments for 2026 have already been allocated, with initial fleets due to be shipped to Hyundai’s Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and to Google DeepMind in the coming months. New customers can receive the robots from early 2027.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” said Robert Playter, chief executive of Boston Dynamics. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionise the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children–useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Atlas is designed as an enterprise-grade humanoid robot capable of carrying out a wide range of industrial tasks, including material handling and order fulfilment. According to the company, it can learn new tasks quickly, adapt to changing environments and operate autonomously with minimal supervision. When its battery runs low, the robot can navigate to a charging station, replace its own battery and resume work without human intervention.
The robot can be integrated with manufacturing execution systems and warehouse management systems using Boston Dynamics’ Orbit software. Once a task is learned by one robot, it can be replicated across an entire fleet.
Atlas can operate autonomously, be controlled remot *** Local C
(c) Dukas -
DUK10167995_011
FEATURE - Rise of the Autobots: Dieses Jahr werden 30000 hochentwickelte Androiden vom Typ Atlas in den Arbeitseinsatz gehen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Pioneering robotics firm Boston Dynamics has unveiled its latest Atlas humanoid robot and announced that 30,000 will be working in Hyundai factories across the world.
The unveiling occurred at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday during a live demonstration of a prototype Atlas and a choreographed performance by several of the company’s Spot robots.
Production of the new Atlas robots, which incorporate advanced AI, will begin immediately at Boston Dynamics’ headquarters in Boston.
All 30,000 deployments for 2026 have already been allocated, with initial fleets due to be shipped to Hyundai’s Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and to Google DeepMind in the coming months. New customers can receive the robots from early 2027.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” said Robert Playter, chief executive of Boston Dynamics. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionise the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children–useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Atlas is designed as an enterprise-grade humanoid robot capable of carrying out a wide range of industrial tasks, including material handling and order fulfilment. According to the company, it can learn new tasks quickly, adapt to changing environments and operate autonomously with minimal supervision. When its battery runs low, the robot can navigate to a charging station, replace its own battery and resume work without human intervention.
The robot can be integrated with manufacturing execution systems and warehouse management systems using Boston Dynamics’ Orbit software. Once a task is learned by one robot, it can be replicated across an entire fleet.
Atlas can operate autonomously, be controlled remot *** Local C
(c) Dukas -
DUK10167995_010
FEATURE - Rise of the Autobots: Dieses Jahr werden 30000 hochentwickelte Androiden vom Typ Atlas in den Arbeitseinsatz gehen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Pioneering robotics firm Boston Dynamics has unveiled its latest Atlas humanoid robot and announced that 30,000 will be working in Hyundai factories across the world.
The unveiling occurred at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday during a live demonstration of a prototype Atlas and a choreographed performance by several of the company’s Spot robots.
Production of the new Atlas robots, which incorporate advanced AI, will begin immediately at Boston Dynamics’ headquarters in Boston.
All 30,000 deployments for 2026 have already been allocated, with initial fleets due to be shipped to Hyundai’s Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and to Google DeepMind in the coming months. New customers can receive the robots from early 2027.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” said Robert Playter, chief executive of Boston Dynamics. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionise the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children–useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Atlas is designed as an enterprise-grade humanoid robot capable of carrying out a wide range of industrial tasks, including material handling and order fulfilment. According to the company, it can learn new tasks quickly, adapt to changing environments and operate autonomously with minimal supervision. When its battery runs low, the robot can navigate to a charging station, replace its own battery and resume work without human intervention.
The robot can be integrated with manufacturing execution systems and warehouse management systems using Boston Dynamics’ Orbit software. Once a task is learned by one robot, it can be replicated across an entire fleet.
Atlas can operate autonomously, be controlled remot *** Local C
(c) Dukas -
DUK10167995_009
FEATURE - Rise of the Autobots: Dieses Jahr werden 30000 hochentwickelte Androiden vom Typ Atlas in den Arbeitseinsatz gehen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Pioneering robotics firm Boston Dynamics has unveiled its latest Atlas humanoid robot and announced that 30,000 will be working in Hyundai factories across the world.
The unveiling occurred at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday during a live demonstration of a prototype Atlas and a choreographed performance by several of the company’s Spot robots.
Production of the new Atlas robots, which incorporate advanced AI, will begin immediately at Boston Dynamics’ headquarters in Boston.
All 30,000 deployments for 2026 have already been allocated, with initial fleets due to be shipped to Hyundai’s Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and to Google DeepMind in the coming months. New customers can receive the robots from early 2027.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” said Robert Playter, chief executive of Boston Dynamics. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionise the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children–useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Atlas is designed as an enterprise-grade humanoid robot capable of carrying out a wide range of industrial tasks, including material handling and order fulfilment. According to the company, it can learn new tasks quickly, adapt to changing environments and operate autonomously with minimal supervision. When its battery runs low, the robot can navigate to a charging station, replace its own battery and resume work without human intervention.
The robot can be integrated with manufacturing execution systems and warehouse management systems using Boston Dynamics’ Orbit software. Once a task is learned by one robot, it can be replicated across an entire fleet.
Atlas can operate autonomously, be controlled remot *** Local C
(c) Dukas -
DUK10167995_008
FEATURE - Rise of the Autobots: Dieses Jahr werden 30000 hochentwickelte Androiden vom Typ Atlas in den Arbeitseinsatz gehen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Pioneering robotics firm Boston Dynamics has unveiled its latest Atlas humanoid robot and announced that 30,000 will be working in Hyundai factories across the world.
The unveiling occurred at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday during a live demonstration of a prototype Atlas and a choreographed performance by several of the company’s Spot robots.
Production of the new Atlas robots, which incorporate advanced AI, will begin immediately at Boston Dynamics’ headquarters in Boston.
All 30,000 deployments for 2026 have already been allocated, with initial fleets due to be shipped to Hyundai’s Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and to Google DeepMind in the coming months. New customers can receive the robots from early 2027.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” said Robert Playter, chief executive of Boston Dynamics. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionise the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children–useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Atlas is designed as an enterprise-grade humanoid robot capable of carrying out a wide range of industrial tasks, including material handling and order fulfilment. According to the company, it can learn new tasks quickly, adapt to changing environments and operate autonomously with minimal supervision. When its battery runs low, the robot can navigate to a charging station, replace its own battery and resume work without human intervention.
The robot can be integrated with manufacturing execution systems and warehouse management systems using Boston Dynamics’ Orbit software. Once a task is learned by one robot, it can be replicated across an entire fleet.
Atlas can operate autonomously, be controlled remot *** Local C
(c) Dukas -
DUK10167995_006
FEATURE - Rise of the Autobots: Dieses Jahr werden 30000 hochentwickelte Androiden vom Typ Atlas in den Arbeitseinsatz gehen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
Pioneering robotics firm Boston Dynamics has unveiled its latest Atlas humanoid robot and announced that 30,000 will be working in Hyundai factories across the world.
The unveiling occurred at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas on Monday during a live demonstration of a prototype Atlas and a choreographed performance by several of the company’s Spot robots.
Production of the new Atlas robots, which incorporate advanced AI, will begin immediately at Boston Dynamics’ headquarters in Boston.
All 30,000 deployments for 2026 have already been allocated, with initial fleets due to be shipped to Hyundai’s Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) and to Google DeepMind in the coming months. New customers can receive the robots from early 2027.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” said Robert Playter, chief executive of Boston Dynamics. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionise the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children–useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Atlas is designed as an enterprise-grade humanoid robot capable of carrying out a wide range of industrial tasks, including material handling and order fulfilment. According to the company, it can learn new tasks quickly, adapt to changing environments and operate autonomously with minimal supervision. When its battery runs low, the robot can navigate to a charging station, replace its own battery and resume work without human intervention.
The robot can be integrated with manufacturing execution systems and warehouse management systems using Boston Dynamics’ Orbit software. Once a task is learned by one robot, it can be replicated across an entire fleet.
Atlas can operate autonomously, be controlled remot *** Local C
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_177003697_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003696_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003695_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003694_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003693_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003683_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003682_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003681_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003680_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003679_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003678_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003677_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003676_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003675_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUKAS_177003674_BES
Boston Dynamics développe un robot humanoïde pour travailler dans des usines
Picture MUST credit: Boston Dynamics A company developing a humanoid robot to work in factories has shown off footage of the machine performing tasks autonomously moving car parts. The bipedal Atlas is the work of US-based robotics firm Boston Dynamics which is behind four-legged robot dog Spot. Atlas is shown moving engine covers between supplier containers and a mobile sequencing dolly to be wheeled to the production line at some point. The robot receives as input a list of bin locations to move parts between. It uses a machine learning vision model to detect the covers and individual bins. The 1.5 metre tall battery-powered machine is equipped with a specialised grasping hand and continuously estimates the state of the objects to be handled to achieve the task. It demonstrates unique motions including turning its head with a 360 degree range. It can also walk backwards with its hip joint turned 180 degrees, while the torso rotates to orient itself for the next operation. This design provides mobility and joint rotations that are larger than the range of the human body. Picture supplied by JLPPA
JLPPA / Bestimage -
DUK10139988_012
FEATURE - Roboter-Hund ist mit einem Arm noch vielseitiger einsetzbar
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 12595
02/02/2020
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Boston Dynamics
A robotic dog being developed for commercial use has just become even more useful – with the attachment of an arm.The new limb on the four-legged Spot, created by US company Boston Dynamics, actually looks like a long bird’s neck with a beak-like grabber at the end.The firm has shown it off performing a string of tasks with the additional – including two getting together to work a skipping rope for a basic Spot model to enjoy.Other jobs it carries out include gardening by digging a hole and putting a new plant in it, dragging a concrete block, picking up discarded clothes from the floor and opening a door.At the end of a video clip showing Spot doing all the jobs, it is scene writing out perfectly neat letters in chalk in an open car park.As the camera pans away, it reveals the machine has written the Boston Dynamics name in perfectly straight capital letters.
OPS: The new version of Spot with head-like arm , collecting dirty laundry from the floor and putting it into a basket on its back
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10139988_011
FEATURE - Roboter-Hund ist mit einem Arm noch vielseitiger einsetzbar
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 12595
02/02/2020
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Boston Dynamics
A robotic dog being developed for commercial use has just become even more useful – with the attachment of an arm.The new limb on the four-legged Spot, created by US company Boston Dynamics, actually looks like a long bird’s neck with a beak-like grabber at the end.The firm has shown it off performing a string of tasks with the additional – including two getting together to work a skipping rope for a basic Spot model to enjoy.Other jobs it carries out include gardening by digging a hole and putting a new plant in it, dragging a concrete block, picking up discarded clothes from the floor and opening a door.At the end of a video clip showing Spot doing all the jobs, it is scene writing out perfectly neat letters in chalk in an open car park.As the camera pans away, it reveals the machine has written the Boston Dynamics name in perfectly straight capital letters.
OPS: The new version of spot with head-like arm , collecting dirty laundry from the floor and putting it into a basket on its back
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10139988_010
FEATURE - Roboter-Hund ist mit einem Arm noch vielseitiger einsetzbar
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 12595
02/02/2020
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Boston Dynamics
A robotic dog being developed for commercial use has just become even more useful – with the attachment of an arm.The new limb on the four-legged Spot, created by US company Boston Dynamics, actually looks like a long bird’s neck with a beak-like grabber at the end.The firm has shown it off performing a string of tasks with the additional – including two getting together to work a skipping rope for a basic Spot model to enjoy.Other jobs it carries out include gardening by digging a hole and putting a new plant in it, dragging a concrete block, picking up discarded clothes from the floor and opening a door.At the end of a video clip showing Spot doing all the jobs, it is scene writing out perfectly neat letters in chalk in an open car park.As the camera pans away, it reveals the machine has written the Boston Dynamics name in perfectly straight capital letters.
OPS: The new version of spot with head-like arm , digging a hole with a trowel before planting a shrub
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10139988_009
FEATURE - Roboter-Hund ist mit einem Arm noch vielseitiger einsetzbar
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 12595
02/02/2020
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Boston Dynamics
A robotic dog being developed for commercial use has just become even more useful – with the attachment of an arm.The new limb on the four-legged Spot, created by US company Boston Dynamics, actually looks like a long bird’s neck with a beak-like grabber at the end.The firm has shown it off performing a string of tasks with the additional – including two getting together to work a skipping rope for a basic Spot model to enjoy.Other jobs it carries out include gardening by digging a hole and putting a new plant in it, dragging a concrete block, picking up discarded clothes from the floor and opening a door.At the end of a video clip showing Spot doing all the jobs, it is scene writing out perfectly neat letters in chalk in an open car park.As the camera pans away, it reveals the machine has written the Boston Dynamics name in perfectly straight capital letters.
OPS: Two of the new versions of Spot with head-like arm, operate a skipping rope for an arm-less Spot to jump.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10139988_008
FEATURE - Roboter-Hund ist mit einem Arm noch vielseitiger einsetzbar
Ferrari Press Agency
Spot 1
Ref 12595
02/02/2020
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Boston Dynamics
A robotic dog being developed for commercial use has just become even more useful – with the attachment of an arm.The new limb on the four-legged Spot, created by US company Boston Dynamics, actually looks like a long bird’s neck with a beak-like grabber at the end.The firm has shown it off performing a string of tasks with the additional – including two getting together to work a skipping rope for a basic Spot model to enjoy.Other jobs it carries out include gardening by digging a hole and putting a new plant in it, dragging a concrete block, picking up discarded clothes from the floor and opening a door.At the end of a video clip showing Spot doing all the jobs, it is scene writing out perfectly neat letters in chalk in an open car park.As the camera pans away, it reveals the machine has written the Boston Dynamics name in perfectly straight capital letters.
OPS: The new version of spot with head-like arm , dragging a heavyweight concrete block
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas
