The BMW Group is consistently advancing the digitalisation and use of artificial intelligence in production. A key element in this effort is “Physical AI”, which combines digital artificial intelligence (AI) with real machines and robots. This enables intelligent systems such as humanoid robots to be integrated into real-world production processes.
For the first time, the BMW Group is now bringing Physical AI to Europe and launching a pilot project with humanoid robots at the Leipzig plant. The project aims to integrate humanoid robotics into existing series production of cars and to explore further applications in the production of batteries and components.
“Digitalisation improves the competitiveness of our production – here in Europe and worldwide. The symbiosis of engineering expertise and artificial intelligence opens up entirely new possibilities in production,” said Milan Nedeljković, Member of the Board of Management of BMW AG, Production.
Drizznarte on
Humanoid robots are fundamentally designed badly. If you made off meat it’s an effective design. But machines can do much better when they aren’t constrained to such a silly form.
YouCantSeeMe555 on
What do they cost per robot and how long does a battery last? Once the math maths I will take more notice.
Energy dense lightweight batteries are key and the human body using food for energy is still way more efficient.
farticustheelder on
The bot in the video moves slower than a person and regular industrial robots (the big hulking non-humanoid kind) move orders of magnitude faster.
China is already running ‘dark factories’ “highly advanced, fully automated manufacturing facilities that operate 24/7 without lights, heating, or human workers,” per Google AI, so I’m not sure what benefits going humanoid bot provides.
DeepInEvil on
I mean, if you just need some hands to do things you probably didn’t need to put a face or something. It’s probably for attracting investors
Fabulous-Assist3901 on
Se vienen más despidos al final vamos a tener que comer todos piedras
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From the article
The BMW Group is consistently advancing the digitalisation and use of artificial intelligence in production. A key element in this effort is “Physical AI”, which combines digital artificial intelligence (AI) with real machines and robots. This enables intelligent systems such as humanoid robots to be integrated into real-world production processes.
For the first time, the BMW Group is now bringing Physical AI to Europe and launching a pilot project with humanoid robots at the Leipzig plant. The project aims to integrate humanoid robotics into existing series production of cars and to explore further applications in the production of batteries and components.
“Digitalisation improves the competitiveness of our production – here in Europe and worldwide. The symbiosis of engineering expertise and artificial intelligence opens up entirely new possibilities in production,” said Milan Nedeljković, Member of the Board of Management of BMW AG, Production.
Humanoid robots are fundamentally designed badly. If you made off meat it’s an effective design. But machines can do much better when they aren’t constrained to such a silly form.
What do they cost per robot and how long does a battery last? Once the math maths I will take more notice.
Energy dense lightweight batteries are key and the human body using food for energy is still way more efficient.
The bot in the video moves slower than a person and regular industrial robots (the big hulking non-humanoid kind) move orders of magnitude faster.
China is already running ‘dark factories’ “highly advanced, fully automated manufacturing facilities that operate 24/7 without lights, heating, or human workers,” per Google AI, so I’m not sure what benefits going humanoid bot provides.
I mean, if you just need some hands to do things you probably didn’t need to put a face or something. It’s probably for attracting investors
Se vienen más despidos al final vamos a tener que comer todos piedras