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Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News

Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News

Auteur(s): Inception Point Ai
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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.

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  • Robots Rocking Industry 4.0: Secrets of Surging Automation Revealed!
    Nov 19 2025
    This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast.

    Thanks for joining us for Robotics Industry Insider for November 20, 2025. Industrial automation is riding a remarkable wave, despite some market turbulence last year; Coherent Market Insights now values the global industrial automation market at over 238 billion United States dollars for 2025, and projects a near-doubling by 2032, with North America and Asia-Pacific both powering forward thanks to widespread factory upgrades, government pushes for Industry 4.0, and a relentless drive for productivity gains. According to Interact Analysis and Thunderbit, North America alone saw orders for over 9,000 new industrial robots in the first quarter of 2025—they are fast becoming the backbone of manufacturing, logistics, and even service industries.

    The year has already marked some major breakthroughs. Rockwell Automation’s OTTO autonomous mobile robot just won the 2025 IERA Award for translating heavy-load automation into practical, scalable factory fleets, underscoring how advanced fleet management and remote analytics are revolutionizing large-scale material handling. In parallel, motion technology leader Maxon is debuting upgraded High Efficiency Joints at this month’s SPS trade fair, integrating sensors, drive, and control in compact modules tailored for both collaborative and industrial robots—delivering high torque in a small footprint and pointing to real technical leaps for applications demanding flexibility and safety. Partnerships are also driving progress, with Viam and Universal Robots integrating advanced collaborative robots for manufacturing and marine sectors, showing that intelligent, modular automation is now reaching the hardest-to-automate corners of industry.

    Research and market watchers are clear: AI remains the heartbeat of robotics innovation. Machine learning and vision are central to new systems, as evidenced by the rapid rollout of computer vision spinouts like Intel’s RealSense and robust investment in fully autonomous robots for tough jobs like truck loading and logistics. Industry analysts at Roland Berger note that 2024’s brief slowdown gave way to new digital transformation tailwinds for the sector in 2025, as demand rebounds and manufacturers double down on smart systems to counter labor shortages and rising costs.

    For listeners adapting to these changes, the practical takeaway is clear: focus on collaborative automation, data-driven optimization, and adaptability in your deployments. Tariff uncertainty and trade investigations—like the US Commerce Department’s current review of robotics imports—call for supply chain agility and close engagement with both vendors and regulators. Looking ahead, ongoing growth in IIoT connectivity, modular cobot platforms, and embodied AI signals that robotics is central to the future of every industrial operation.

    Thanks for tuning in to Robotics Industry Insider. Be sure to join us next week for more insights. This has been a Quiet Please production—learn more about me at Quiet Please Dot AI.


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    3 min
  • Robots Rebound: AI Sparks Automation Frenzy as Regulators Loom
    Nov 17 2025
    This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast.

    Industrial robotics and automation are entering a pivotal phase this November as markets recover from last year’s slowdown with a new surge of innovation, strategic partnerships, and regulatory pressures shaping the landscape. The latest issue of Robotics and Automation Magazine notes that demand for industrial robots is climbing again, particularly across Europe, Asia, and the Americas, fueled by a new generation of collaborative robots and AI-driven systems that are narrowing the gap between human and machine operations. Human-robot collaboration is now at the core of engineered workflows, with advanced AI perception and safety interlocks reducing workplace injuries while boosting output.

    Industry watchers, including Roland Berger, explain that although the sector faced a challenging investment climate and slower growth in 2024 and early 2025, robust expansion is forecast through the end of the decade, especially in pharmaceuticals, medical technology, and food and beverage manufacturing. Grand View Research points out that the global industrial automation and control systems market reached over $226 billion in 2025 and is projected to soar to nearly $379 billion by 2030, an annual growth rate above 10 percent. Technavio suggests over 80 percent of manufacturers are now investing in automation, underlining the sector’s long-term strength.

    Recent developments reveal both innovation and headwinds. Composite highlights from RoboticsTomorrow show how DoorDash expanded its partnership with Coco Robotics for autonomous delivery in Miami, Lavo AI pilots are addressing chronic labor shortages in janitorial services, and igus introduced Iggy Rob, a new humanoid robot for both industry and service. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Commerce is investigating robotics imports under Section 232, raising questions about future tariffs and prompting logistics and warehouse operators to advocate for stable, open access to technology, as explained by Plus One Robotics CEO Erik Nieves.

    On the technical front, Automatica 2025 showcased how connected robotic ecosystems and high-fidelity force control—exemplified by Flexiv and NVIDIA—are redefining simulation and application-specific adaptability. Maxon’s new high efficiency joints and servo drives, revealed at SPS 2025, promise to make compact robots more powerful and versatile, while MVTec’s latest HALCON deep learning release enables continual learning with minimal training data, setting new standards for operational flexibility.

    For those in the industry, practical action items include evaluating supply chain risk as new trade rules are enforced, increasing investment in AI-powered safety and perception systems, and piloting collaborative robot applications in workflow redesign. Looking forward, trends point to closer human-robot collaboration, wider AI integration, and data-driven process optimization, all within a competitive environment shaped by both technology and policy.

    Thanks for tuning in. Be sure to come back next week for more insights on robotics and automation. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out Quiet Please Dot A I.


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    4 min
  • Robots Sizzle: AI Sparks Flexible Automation Frenzy as Market Booms
    Nov 16 2025
    This is you Robotics Industry Insider: AI & Automation News podcast.

    Thanks for joining us for Robotics Industry Insider: AI and Automation News, your weekly look into the world where intelligent machines are redefining industry. This week, listeners are witnessing the transition to truly flexible, software-defined automation solutions across manufacturing and warehousing. Siemens’ latest industry signals point to a coming era when autonomous industrial robots will be trained entirely in digital twin environments. Manufacturers are now leveraging virtual representations of their operations to simulate new processes and deploy AI-driven robotics that don’t require traditional programming. The result: robots derive instructions directly from 3D designs and operate seamlessly in complex, ever-changing facilities.

    According to Mordor Intelligence, the industrial automation market reached 221.64 billion dollars in 2025, and it’s set to surge to over 325 billion dollars by 2030—a growth rate of nearly eight percent each year. Asia-Pacific remains the fastest-growing region, capturing more than forty percent of global share. China, Japan, and India are at the forefront, boosted by aggressive government incentives for smart factories and collaborative robotics.

    One major news item this week is the partnership between Chang Robotics and Rockwell Automation, announced November fourteenth, accelerating the deployment of mobile robots in warehouses and production lines. This teamwork highlights a larger trend—industrial automation companies are joining forces to streamline robot implementation, reduce integration barriers, and meet surging demand for adaptability in logistics and fulfillment.

    Listeners should also note the U.S. Department of Commerce’s ongoing Section 232 investigation into robotics and CNC equipment. Erik Nieves at Plus One Robotics explains that possible new tariffs could reshape cost structures for automation tech in North America, and he encourages stakeholders to engage with policymakers.

    From a technological standpoint, collaborative robots and autonomous mobile robots, or AMRs, are evolving rapidly. Recent surveys from Automated Warehouse show that operators are pivoting away from rigid infrastructure toward modular, scalable systems easily adaptable to shifting demand and labor constraints. AI native, teach-less robotics are slashing changeover times and unlocking entirely new workflows where machines and humans work side by side in unstructured, dynamic environments.

    With trends like edge computing, Industrial Internet of Things connectivity, and the merging of digital twins and industrial metaverse platforms, future automation systems will be even more intelligent, interoperable, and responsive. For practical action, companies should invest in flexible automation, pilot digital twin technologies, and evaluate partnerships to stay ahead of changing standards.

    Looking ahead, this multidimensional push for adaptability and intelligence in robotics is set to accelerate. Expect a return to double-digit growth after this year’s mild slow-down as innovations in pharmaceuticals, electronics, and food production drive demand. Thanks for tuning in to Robotics Industry Insider, a Quiet Please production. Check out Quiet Please Dot A I, and come back next week as we cover the breakthroughs shaping tomorrow’s automation landscape.


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    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    4 min
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