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ROBOTS

Machines designed to sense, think, and act. From factory arms to Mars rovers — discover the world of robotics and the technology shaping our future.

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Types of Robots

Modern robotics spans dozens of specializations. From precision manufacturing to deep ocean exploration, each type is engineered for a unique domain.

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Industrial

Heavy-duty arms and automated assembly lines performing welding, painting, and precision manufacturing in factories worldwide.

Manufacturing
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Humanoid

Human-shaped robots designed for natural interaction, navigation of human environments, and versatile bipedal locomotion.

AI + Mobility
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Aerial (Drones)

Autonomous flying machines for surveying, delivery, cinematography, agriculture monitoring, and search-and-rescue missions.

Aviation
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Medical

Surgical assistants, rehabilitation devices, and nano-bots enabling minimally invasive procedures and targeted drug delivery.

Healthcare
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Underwater (AUVs)

Submersible robots exploring ocean depths, inspecting pipelines, mapping reefs, and conducting deep-sea research.

Marine
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Autonomous Vehicles

Self-driving cars, trucks, and shuttles leveraging LiDAR, computer vision, and AI to navigate roads without human input.

Transport

Milestones in Robotics

Click any event to learn more about pivotal moments that shaped the field of robotics.

1920

The Word "Robot" is Born

Karel ÄŒapek's play R.U.R. introduces the term "robot" to the world.

The Czech word "robota" means forced labor. In the play, artificial humans rebel against their creators — a theme that continues to echo through science fiction and ethical AI debate today.
1954

First Programmable Robot

George Devol patents the Unimate, the first industrial robot arm.

Unimate was installed at a General Motors factory in 1961, performing die-casting and spot welding. It marked the beginning of robotic automation in manufacturing.
1997

Sojourner Lands on Mars

NASA's rover becomes the first wheeled robot to explore another planet.

Sojourner operated for 83 days on the Martian surface, far exceeding its 7-day mission plan. It paved the way for Spirit, Opportunity, Curiosity, and Perseverance.
2000

ASIMO Walks

Honda reveals ASIMO, a humanoid robot capable of bipedal locomotion.

ASIMO could walk, run, climb stairs, and recognize faces and gestures. It became one of the most iconic humanoid robots, inspiring a generation of robotics research.
2011

Watson Wins Jeopardy!

IBM's AI system defeats human champions, showcasing natural language AI.

Watson processed natural language questions, retrieved knowledge, and generated answers in real time — demonstrating the convergence of AI and robotics that would accelerate in the years ahead.
2020s

The Age of General-Purpose Robots

Foundation models and large language models enable robots to understand open-ended instructions.

Companies are training robots with vision-language-action models, enabling them to perform hundreds of tasks in homes, warehouses, and hospitals with minimal task-specific programming.

Build Your Robot

Configure a custom robot by selecting its type, power source, AI level, and primary mission.

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ATLAS-7X
Bipedal • Li-ion Battery • Adaptive AI • Exploration
Speed
Power
Intel
Range

Asimov's Laws of Robotics

First proposed by Isaac Asimov in 1942, these three laws remain the foundational ethical framework discussed in robotics and AI safety today.

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Do No Harm

A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.

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Obey Orders

A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.

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Self-Preservation

A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

Robotics Quiz

How much do you know about the world of robots? Take this quick quiz to find out.