AI-powered humanoid robots could take over large sections of factory work within the next five to ten years, transforming the manufacturing industry, predicts Arm CEO Rene Haas.

One of the key forces pushing humanoid robots into factories is their advantage over the robotic arms and other automation machinery in use today, Haas said. Traditional factory robots are purpose-built machines designed for a single task, with both hardware and software optimized for that specific function. General purpose humanoid robots by contrast, combined with increasingly sophisticated “physical AI” that helps navigate the real world, will be able to take on different jobs on-the-fly with quick modifications to their instructions.

“I think in the next five years, you’re going to see large sections of facto

See Full Page