The Largest Robotics Companies in the World
The headline identifies the largest robotics companies in the world.
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Industry Wire
Curated industry headlines with our editorial take on why they matter to the factory floor.
The headline identifies the largest robotics companies in the world.
A robotics startup backed by Nvidia, Amazon and other investors has raised $1.4 billion. The headline does not specify the startup’s products, target customers, or manufacturing use cases.
China’s humanoid robot sector is expanding rapidly, raising concerns that competition could turn into severe price wars.
The headline presents a list of 22 investors to know in robotics and physical AI.
The headline points to an outlook for India’s coding and marking systems industry covering 2026 through 2035.
IndexBox reports that the backstop clutches market is expected to reach new heights by 2035, driven by automation in mining and logistics.
The headline argues that industrial robotics are needed to modernize the global economy, but that outcome is not guaranteed.
An insider says an autonomous Ukrainian drone secretly killed Russian soldiers.
China has launched a nationwide drive to deploy humanoid robots. The headline indicates a broad push to move this technology into use across the country.
Beijing is advancing embodied AI development, with the headline framing the topic around robots at work.
A Daxbot robot was deployed to survey Tyler sidewalks that were destroyed by a vehicle.
Theker has raised $85 million to build a factory robot described as not specializing in any single task.
The headline reports RealSense GMSL depth cameras for use in industrial robotics.
BMW is deploying humanoid robots in production at its Leipzig operation.
The headline reports a correction related to Standard Bots. It does not state what information was corrected.
Barcelona-based THEKER raised a €73 million Series A to accelerate AI robotics deployment.
Samsung is backing industrial robotics startup Theker in an €85m round.
Funding is backing Standard Bots, which is described as being on track for 10% of new U.S. industrial robots.
GiantLeap Capital announced a strategic investment in Standard Bots, described as America's largest manufacturer of AI-native industrial robots.
Standard Bots raised a $200 million Series C at a $1 billion valuation to scale AI-native American robotics, according to the headline.