Robots Are Taking Over and They're Bringing Their Subscription Plans With Them - podcast episode cover

Robots Are Taking Over and They're Bringing Their Subscription Plans With Them

Feb 02, 20263 min
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Episode description

This is you Emerging Technology Trends: AI, Robotics & Digital Innovation podcast.

The artificial intelligence and robotics revolution has reached an inflection point. According to Nvidia's Jensen Huang at CES, the ChatGPT moment for physical AI has arrived, marking a fundamental shift from research into real-world deployment across manufacturing, logistics, and healthcare.

The numbers tell a compelling story. The global robotics market sits at nearly 50 billion dollars in 2025 and is projected to reach 111 billion by 2030, growing at a 14 percent compound annual rate. More dramatically, the artificial intelligence robotics market specifically is expanding from 6.11 billion to 33.39 billion in the same period, a staggering 40 percent annual growth rate. What's driving this acceleration? Manufacturers are deploying robotic arms and collaborative robots to address severe labor shortages while humanoid robots from companies like Hyundai are moving from prototype to production settings.

Service robots are emerging as the fastest-growing category, expected to record the highest growth rates through 2030. The humanoid robot market alone will reach 6.5 billion dollars by then. Meanwhile, mobile robots dominate current hardware and software sales, with the mobile robotics segment projected to grow at 16.5 percent annually.

Beyond traditional robotics, artificial intelligence agents powered by large language models are transforming operations. A Deloitte survey found nearly three in four companies plan to deploy agentic artificial intelligence within two years. These systems autonomously monitor equipment, anticipate maintenance needs, and manage supply chains with remarkable efficiency. Internet of Things sensor technologies are becoming cost-effective enablers, with battery-free intelligent labels now tracking assets across manufacturing, logistics, and retail sectors.

Recent deployments underscore the momentum. Amazon deployed its millionth robot with artificial intelligence coordination improving warehouse travel efficiency by 10 percent. BMW's factories now feature vehicles driving themselves through kilometer-long production routes. Industrial and logistics robots are expected to contribute 60 to 65 percent of total robotics market growth, making factory automation the epicenter of this revolution.

Yet challenges remain. Developers must overcome human-like dexterity and pressure control in robotic systems. Cybersecurity becomes increasingly critical as systems grow more digital, with 87 percent of executives identifying artificial intelligence vulnerabilities as the fastest-growing cyber risk.

For organizations, the emerging Robots-as-a-Service model offers opportunity. Instead of massive capital purchases, companies can access hardware, software, and maintenance through monthly subscriptions, democratizing automation for businesses of all sizes.

Thank you for tuning in. Please come back next week for more emerging technology insights. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out Quiet Please dot A I.


For more http://www.quietplease.ai

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

Transcript

Speaker 1

The artificial intelligence and robotics revolution has reached an inflection point. According to Nvidius Jensen Hong at Cees, the chat GPT moment for physical AI has arrived, marking a fundamental shift from research into real world deployment across manufacturing, logistics, and healthcare.

The numbers tell a compelling story. The global robotics market sits at nearly fifty billion dollars in twenty twenty five and is projected to reach one hundred and eleven billion by twenty thirty, growing at a fourteen percent compound annual rate. More dramatically, the artificial intelligence robotics market specifically is expanding from six point one to one billion to thirty three point three nine billion in the same period, a staggering

forty percent annual growth rate. What's driving this acceleration. Manufacturers are deploying robotic arms and collaborative robots to address severe labor shortages, while humanoid robots from companies like Hundu are moving from prototype to production settings. Service robots are emerging as the fastest growing category, expected to record the highest growth rates through twenty thirty, The humanoid robot market alone

will reach six point five billion dollars by then. Meanwhile, mobile robots dominate current hardware and software sales, with the mobile robotics segment projected to grow at sixteen point five percent annually. Beyond traditional robotics, artificial intelligence agents powered by large language models are transforming operations. A Deloitte survey found nearly three to four companies planned to deploy agentic artificial

intelligence within two years. These systems autonomously monitor equipment, anticipate maintenance needs, and manage supply chains with remarkable efficiency. Internet of Things sensor technologies are becoming cost effective enablers, with battery free intelligent labels now tracking assets across manufacturing, logistics, and retail sectors. Recent the employments underscore the momentum. Amazon deployed its millionth robot with artificial intelligence coordination, improving warehouse

travel efficiency by ten percent. BMW's factories now feature vehicles driving themselves through kilometer long production routes. Industrial and logistics robots are expected to contribute sixty to sixty five percent of total robotics market growth, making factory automation the epicenter of this revolution. Yet challenges remain. Developers must overcome human

like dexterity and pressure control in robotic systems. Cybersecurity becomes increasingly critical as systems grow more digital, with eighty seven percent of executives identifying artificial intelligence vulnerabilities as the fastest growing cyber risk for organizations. The emerging robots as a service model offers opportunity instead of massive capital purchases. Companies can access hardware, software and maintenance through monthly subscribe, democratizing

automation for businesses of all sizes. Thank you for tuning in. Please come back next week for more emerging technology insights. This has been a quiet Please production for more check out quiet Please dot a I

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