Robotics

Humanoid robots join the assembly line to build more of themselves

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Apptronik's Apollo robot will have to successfully carry out simple repetitive tasks before it can help manufacture humanoid bots like itself
Apptronik
Apptronik's Apollo robot will have to successfully carry out simple repetitive tasks before it can help manufacture humanoid bots like itself
Apptronik
Apollo is currently capable of stacking warehouses with cases and moving cargo around – so manufacturing copies of itself will be quite the step up
Apptronik
Apollo stands 5 feet 8 inches tall and can haul payloads of up to 55 lb
Apptronik
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Cue the self-replicating robot revolution: Apptronik's humanoid Apollo robot is gearing up to assist in manufacturing copies of itself. That's thanks to a deal between the Texas-based robotics company and global engineering solutions firm Jabil, which produces components for the likes of Apple, Dell, and HP.

The partnership will see both companies put Apollo robots to work on assembly lines at Jabil's operations, including the ones for manufacturing Apollo bots.

Apollo will have to prove itself capable first, though. It'll initially be assigned "an array of simple, repetitive intralogistics and manufacturing tasks, including inspection, sorting, kitting, lineside delivery, fixture placement, and sub-assembly." The idea is for Apollo to eventually be deployed to functioning manufacturing facilities and free up human workers.

Apollo stands 5 feet 8 inches tall and can haul payloads of up to 55 lb
Apptronik

Jabil is also set to scale production of Apollo robot production, with the hopes of getting the robot to an attractive price point for Apptronik customers. The humanoid was first unveiled in 2023, and is set to become commercially available next year.

Measuring 5 ft 8 in (173 cm) tall, Apollo can handle payloads of up to 55 lb (25 kg) and operate for four hours on a single charge. It's currently billed as being capable of rudimentary tasks like loading cargo, and moving cases around warehouses. Adding product assembly skills to its feature set will be a major leap forward for the bipedal bot.

Apollo is currently capable of stacking warehouses with cases and moving cargo around – so manufacturing copies of itself will be quite the step up
Apptronik

Of course, its maker believes it's destined for greater things. Last March, Apptronik shipped Apollo bots to Mercedes-Benz to help human workers build the automaker's cars. TechCrunch notes this project is still in the pilot phase. Apptronik also just raised US$350 million in a Series A funding round earlier this month with the aim of scaling up Apollo production, and partnered with Google DeepMind last December to add AI smarts to the bot.

Jabil's senior VP of global business units Rafael Renno explained that this new project is a big deal for next-generation factories: “Not only will we get a first-hand look at the impact that general-purpose robots can have as we test Apollo in our operations, but as we begin producing Apollo units, we can play a role in defining the future of manufacturing."

Apptronik hasn't revealed what Apollo might cost when it goes on sale, but we do have some points of reference: Unitree's G1 is priced at $16,000, and Tesla's Optimus is expected to slot in somewhere between $20,000 and $30,000.

While it's currently trialing Apollo's manufacturing capabilities, Apptronik believes that it's in a position to make humanoid robots ubiquitous, and have it "expand into new markets and roles, such as front-of-house retail, elder care, and eventually home use."

Source: Apptronik

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9 comments
Cymon Curcumin
I like how one real image was included among the other CGI images. That adds an air of legitimacy to the story.
Uncle Anonymous
Another step in the quest to side line people in the quest for more profit. I wonder, have the oligarchs given any thought to where their money will come from when there are no more paid workers able to afford things?
YourAmazonOrder
Good. Get rid of the deadbeats, especially in logistics. MRP, JIT demand that businesses operate efficiently. Having the warehouse people delay getting in-stock parts to the factory floor for even a nanosecond is ludicrous, but is far, far too common in manufacturing. If these robots can deliver quality in Manufacturing and/or Assembly, even better. No more dropped fixtures = win. No more dropped product = win.
Win = lower prices for YOU, the consumer, the investor, your retirement accounts, your job if you're not one of the deadbeats.
veryken
Of course, that's very logical. Also must use AI to better design and optimize each iteration. Test-working on their own assembly line for continuing improvement should include all components, like better AI chips. We've seen it in sci-fi. It's the easiest and quickest way to evolve them. Literally a no-brainer.
LordInsidious
While I am concerned about jobs and robots replacing us, I think we are overlooking having a robot and needing less from the manufactures. While we can see that a home robot could do the normal household chores, it wouldn't take to much extra (from the open source community) to add more specialized tasks like house repairs, farming, brewing, baking etc. Beyond that we can start exploring human supervising a robot (where needed) upcycling our broken or used products and packing materiel into things that we want and then even lending it to others for more complicated tasks that require multiple robots to accomplish in return for money or their robots time for your large tasks.
Techutante
Robots building robots, Robots designing robots, Robots replacing humans. Hope you like eating bugs and surviving under the floorboards because the world will soon not belong to you.
sleekmarlin
Yikes. It reminds me of the Terminator movies.
YourAmazonOrder
Funny how some comments lament the loss of jobs and others advocate open source.
So, the jobs that don’t require skills should be protected, but those that require intelligence, disciple, creativity, planning and strategy to resolve incredibly complex problems should go unpaid?
Marco McClean
It would be even more efficient to replace the millionaire and billionaire owners of the companies with robots too, and pass the savings on to investors, also robots, for yet further efficiency. Cars and washing machines and chicken pot pies and jeans and teevee sets and everything would be as cheap as dirt.