Хүн дүрст робот бүтээгч Agility Robotics компани Калифорни мужийн Фримонт хотод 60,000 ам метр талбай бүхий робот сургалтын төвөө нээж, үйлдвэрлэл болон ложистикийн салбарт байр сууриа бэхжүүлж байна.
Agility Robotics компанийн Digit робот нь Amazon, GXO, Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada зэрэг томоохон харилцагчдын агуулахын үйл ажиллагаанд аль хэдийн нэвтэрч, 300 сая долларын гэрээт захиалга хүлээн аваад байна. Компанийн гүйцэтгэх захирал Пегги Жонсон тус компани нь аюулгүй байдал, зохицуулалт болон мэдээллийн технологийн дэд бүтцэд нийцсэн роботуудыг арилжааны зориулалтаар амжилттай нэвтрүүлснийг онцоллоо. Одоогоор тус компани олон нийтийн зах зээлд гарах чиглэлээр ажиллаж байгаа бөгөөд энэ нь хүн дүрст роботын салбарт анхны тохиолдол болох юм.
Хэдийгээр AI технологийн дэвшил роботын чадамжийг нэмэгдүүлж байгаа ч Agility Robotics нь аюулгүй байдлын системдээ генератив AI ашиглахаас татгалзаж, илүү баталгаатай технологид суурилсан арга барилыг баримталж байна. Харин роботын програмчлал болон даалгавар гүйцэтгэх чадварыг өргөжүүлэхэд генератив AI-ийн боломжийг ашиглах нь үр дүнтэй гэж үүсгэн байгуулагч Дамион Шелтон үзэж байна.
Тус компани нь гэрийн нөхцөлд зориулсан робот бүтээхээс илүүтэйгээр үйлдвэрлэл, ложистикийн салбарт төвлөрч байгаа бөгөөд энэ оны намар танилцуулагдах Digit-ийн 5 дугаар хувилбар нь хүнийг мэдрэх чадвартай болсноор аюулгүй байдлын бүсээс гадуур ажиллах боломжтой болно. Уг шинэ төв нь роботуудад бодит орчинд шаардлагатай шинэ ур чадваруудыг эзэмшүүлэхэд гол үүрэг гүйцэтгэх юм.
Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах
↓Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓
Agility Robotics is opening a 60,000-square-foot facility to train its humanoid robots in Fremont, California, just up the highway from the factory where Tesla is expected to start manufacturing its Optimus robots this year.
Tesla has increasingly bet on Optimus. Elon Musk recently said he expects it to be “the biggest product ever” once it’s “useful outside of Tesla sometime next year.”
While Agility doesn’t have Tesla’s capital, it does have a robot, Digit, that is already useful in the real world. The robot is already generating revenue, carrying totes and bins in manufacturing and warehouse settings for customers like Amazon, GXO, Schaeffler, and Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada. The company says it has secured $300 million in contract orders for its robots.
“It’s great to have [Tesla] in the same area as us, because really, for a long time Agility was out there alone, and it’s good to have others in the humanoid space,” CEO Peggy Johnson told TechCrunch. “We have commercialized. We now know what it takes to walk into these facilities and meet their safety bars, their regulatory bars, compliance, plug into their IT infrastructure, plug into their warehouse management system.”
Agility hasn’t disclosed how many Digits that it has built or deployed, but outside observers estimate that dozens have worked in pilot or revenue-generating deployments. The company has said, for example, that Digits have moved 100,000 totes at a GXO logistics facility.
Johnson is currently leading Agility through a reverse-merger that is expected to make it the first pure-play humanoid robot company on the public markets later this year. Founded in 2015 by a group of researchers who developed new techniques that allow robots to safely walk on two legs, Agility is trying to capitalize on its lead over a newer generation of AI-inspired robotic startups like Figure, 1X, the Bot Company, or Sunday Robotics.
While the arrival of transformer-based neural networks that helped give rise to LLMs also promises major advancements in robotic behavior, Agility is taking a practical approach to autonomy.
“When you think about self-driving cars, you know, as a non-humanoid example, you really don’t want the anti-lock brake controller under AI control,” Agility co-founder and chairman Damion Shelton told TechCrunch. “The analog with humanoids is all the safety stuff needs to go through a path that’s not generative AI, right? You don’t want to get creative with your safety stack.”
What AI does do, however, is deliver on the promise of scale.
“One of the first times [Bruce Leak, the Quicktime inventor who serves on Agility’s board] asked us how we were going to go about coding applications for the robot, we didn’t really have a good answer,” Shelton said. “The number of things you can imagine a robot doing is far larger than the number of engineers who can program robots. And generative AI answers that question definitively.”
The new facility is designed to accelerate the company’s robotic deployments. Johnson says more than 30 customers are in talks with the company about deploying Digit, and the new facility will be where the six-foot-tall robot learns new skills in environments similar to those it will experience in the field.
Unlike many of the newer entrants to the humanoid space, Agility isn’t planning to offer in-home humanoid robots anytime soon. It’s a view that jibes with that of most independent robotics experts, who believe today’s most powerful robots aren’t safe enough for consumer use. Digit operates in a human-free space right now, but the version 5, expected to be unveiled this fall, will have the ability to sense humans and won’t need to be kept in a robot-only zone.
Co-founder and chief robot officer Jonathan Hurst said there is plenty of work to keep Agility busy in manufacturing and logistics alone.
“Let’s start with the bins and the totes, and then let’s do the picking and the kitting,” Hurst told TechCrunch. “And then let’s like start working on cardboard, which is really hard, and loading and unloading tractor trailers and things like that. Okay, now we’re at 100 million robots, you know? A trillion-dollar company.”
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