Agility Robotics is putting Digit — a two-legged robot that can lift 40-pound packages — on the market. And Ford Motor is the first customer. Ford, which has been involved in a research project with ...
The news: US startup Agility Robotics has just made its two-legged robot Digit available to buy for the first time. The first customer is car giant Ford, which has been testing the robot for ...
Agility Robotics, based in Salem, Oregon, has revealed an expanded range of features for its humanoid robot Digit, aiming to broaden the robot’s market applications in logistics and manufacturing. The ...
Agility's Digit robot has human-like arms and legs. Digit was announced in 2019, with plans to begin shipping orders later this year. The robot is designed to work anywhere a human can and perform ...
The milestone confirms Digit’s ability to perform these jobs consistently, at high payload capacities, and across thousands ...
It all started with Gran Turismo. From those early PlayStation days, Sean was drawn to anything with four wheels. Prior to joining the Roadshow team, he was a freelance contributor for Motor Authority ...
Digit, the bipedal robot developed by Agility Robotics, will continue to evolve and improve, including the addition of a head and some digits of its very own, according to co-founders Damion Shelton ...
Agility Robotics has launched Digit, a robot with arms and legs to work with humans and in human spaces, for commercial sale and Ford was the first customer, receiving the first two off the line. This ...
Instead of a drone or an autonomous vehicle, your next package might be delivered by a bipedal robot. Digit, which was created by a startup called Agility Robotics, is a package-delivery robot that ...
If there's one staple of sci-fi fantasy that humanity has long been wishing for, it's humanoid robotic buddies. Robotics companies have been working for years to develop bipedal robots that can handle ...
The savvy marketers at Boston Dynamics produced two major robotics news cycles last week. The larger of the two was, naturally, the electric Atlas announcement. As I write this, the sub-40 second ...