XMachines Bets Big on Affordable Farm Robotics with the Launch of Neo
XMachines has unveiled Neo, a $19,995 fully electric, multi-purpose farm robot designed for small and mid-sized growers. With modular tools, advanced autonomy, and a rugged tracked chassis, Neo handles spraying, mowing, tilling, seeding, and transport. Global rollout begins in 2026, with 250 units targeted for deployment.
Robots Take Over UT Austin in a Parade of Innovation
Robots marched, danced, and chatted their way across UT Austin during Texas Robotics’ high-energy campus parade. From acrobatic Spot demos to AI-powered conversational bots and student-built medical exosuits, the event showcased the program’s creativity and interdisciplinary strength—capturing wide-eyed crowds and highlighting UT’s growing leadership in next-generation robotics.
Frasky: The Vineyard Robot Bringing Precision Agriculture to Life
Frasky is a new vineyard robot from the Italian Institute of Technology, equipped with a dexterous arm, vision system, and precise spraying tools to navigate rows, inspect crops, and handle fruit. Designed for labor shortages and sustainability challenges, it brings precision agriculture closer to real-world deployment through advanced AI and field-tested autonomy.
Teaching Robots to Fall Gracefully: How Reinforcement Learning Is Redefining Failure
Disney Research and ETH Zurich have developed the first general RL framework that teaches bipedal robots to fall gracefully. Instead of collapsing uncontrollably, robots learn to minimize impact, protect sensitive components, and land in user-specified poses—enabling safer, expressive, and recovery-friendly falls in both simulation and real-world tests.
Warehouse Workers Are Embracing Automation And Seeing Real Benefits, New Report Finds
Exotec’s new Warehouse Workers Sentiment Report finds strong worker support for automation, with nearly half reporting pay increases and 63% reporting higher job satisfaction. Workers say robots boost productivity, safety, and retention, while reducing physical strain and peak-season stress—suggesting automation is becoming a key driver of workplace stability and career growth.
Oxford Team Builds Air-Powered Soft Robots That Sync Themselves—No Electronics Required
Oxford researchers have created soft robots that move, sense, and even synchronize their actions using only air pressure—no electronics, motors, or computers. Built from modular “fluidic” units, the robots generate rhythmic motion and coordinated behavior entirely through physical design, pointing toward fast, efficient, embodied intelligence for future extreme-environment robotics.
SwarmFarm Robotics Is Redefining the Future of Agriculture—From the Heart of Regional Australia
SwarmFarm Robotics is transforming agriculture from regional Australia, with 250+ autonomous robots operating across 10 million acres. Founded by farmers Andrew and Jocie Bate, the company builds simple, repairable robots that cut chemical use, solve labor shortages, and boost sustainability—all while anchoring high-skilled jobs and agtech innovation in rural communities.
ASTM F48 Launches New Task Group to Advance Exoskeleton Testing and Certification
ASTM’s exoskeletons and exosuits committee (F48) has launched a task group to develop mechanical testing protocols for exoskeletons. The effort aims to harmonize global standards, adapt ISO 10328, and establish baseline tests that enable real-world certification, lab readiness, and safer adoption across industrial, medical, consumer, and defense sectors.
Magnetic Threads Could Give Robots a Gentle Touch — And Transform Everyday Fabrics
Researchers have created ultrathin magnetic fibers that can bend, stiffen, and change texture on demand. Woven into soft textiles, they enable gentle robotic grippers, breathable fabrics, and realistic VR haptic gloves. This breakthrough in vector-controlled smart materials could give robots a human-like touch and transform everyday clothing.
Robust.AI Partners with Saddle Creek Logistics to Bring Collaborative AMRs to Charlotte Warehouse
Robust.AI has partnered with Saddle Creek Logistics to deploy its collaborative AMR, Carter™, in a Charlotte fulfillment center. The robot now handles tote transport across multiple lines, reducing walking time, boosting throughput, and easing worker strain. The flexible, “virtual conveyor” system integrates without fixed infrastructure, improving speed, safety, and operational efficiency.
Anthropic Study Shows AI Significantly Boosts Robotics Performance — And Raises Questions About Future Autonomy
Anthropic tested how its AI model Claude could boost real-world robotics performance by having two teams program a robot dog to fetch a ball. The AI-assisted team completed tasks in half the time and advanced toward full autonomy—showing how quickly frontier AI may bridge from digital assistance to physical-world capability.
Europe Steps Forward: Wandercraft and SAPA Partner to Deploy Humanoid Robots in Automotive Manufacturing
Wandercraft has partnered with Italy’s SAPA Group to deploy its Calvin-40 humanoid robots in automotive manufacturing—marking Europe’s first Tier 1 integration of humanoid robotics. Building on its Renault alliance, Wandercraft is expanding real-world deployments that demonstrate how physical AI can deliver measurable industrial value across Europe’s evolving automation landscape.
Johns Hopkins APL’s Robotic Arm Targets Maritime Resilience
Johns Hopkins APL has installed a RAMLAB MaxQ robotic arm to advance repair and additive manufacturing for the U.S. maritime industry. Using wire arc additive manufacturing, the system enables faster, lower-cost repairs of large ship components—supporting small business participation, fleet readiness, and a more resilient maritime industrial base.
“Humanoids Will Spark Korea’s Next Industrial Revolution,” Says Hanyang University’s Han Jae-kwon
At Hanyang University’s 2025 Industry Standards Forum, Professor Han Jae-kwon called humanoid robots Korea’s next industrial revolution. He urged rapid deployment to factories to secure vital industrial data, citing Korea’s strong manufacturing clusters and the growing K-Humanoid Alliance—now over 200 members—as key advantages in the global humanoid race.
A New Kind of Partnership: Bringing Collaborative Humanoid Robots Into U.S. Workplaces
Space Continuum, a Black-owned innovation firm, is partnering with Germany’s NEURA Robotics to bring collaborative humanoid robots to U.S. workplaces. The robots support staff in healthcare, hospitality, education, and manufacturing—helping ease labor shortages, reduce burnout, and enable people and robots to work side-by-side rather than in competition.
The Little Robot Keeping People Independent at Home
Home care provider Cera is rolling out Genie, a voice-activated support robot that reminds patients to take medication, stay hydrated, and connect with carers. Trials show a 96% success rate in medication adherence and up to 20% increased care capacity, reducing strain on staff while helping older and vulnerable people remain independent.
Asparagus Harvesting Robot Matches Human Quality — While Working Up to 4× Faster
WUR field trials show AVL’s S9000 asparagus harvesting robot produces comparable quality to human pickers while working 3–4× faster, with potential peaks up to 10×. In high-yield conditions, one robot can replace six to seven workers, marking a major step toward scalable automation in specialty crop harvesting.
UBTech Accelerates China’s Humanoid Push with Over $110M in Industrial Robot Orders
UBTech has secured over $113M USD in orders for its industrial humanoid robot, the Walker S2, signaling accelerated factory adoption in China. The company is scaling to mass production, targeting 500+ units this year. Competition among Chinese robot makers is rising as humanoids move from demonstration to real-world deployment.
Locus Robotics Begins First Deployment of New ‘Locus Array’ Autonomous Picking System at DHL Facility
Locus Robotics has begun deploying its new Locus Array system at a DHL facility in Ohio, marking a major step toward fully autonomous warehouse picking and replenishment. The new Robots-to-Goods model reduces manual labor and integrates AI-driven planning and robotic execution, positioning Locus to scale next-generation warehouse automation globally.
Doctors Perform First Remote Robotic Stroke Procedure Across the Atlantic
Doctors in Scotland and the US have completed the first remote robotic thrombectomy on a human body, using a system that allows surgeons to remove stroke-causing clots from thousands of miles away. The breakthrough could dramatically expand access to life-saving stroke care, especially in remote or underserved regions.