Monthly Archives: June 2016

Robots and Pizza

Zume Pizza, two minutes from the Google Campus in Mountain Home, California, is bringing robots into the pizza delivery business. In so doing, they’re answering some questions about how collaborative robotic workers will get along with people and how the Industrial Internet of Things will fit into our human life and work. Zume isn’t doing… Read more »

Collaborative Robots: Not Exciting?

Kathryn Cave at IDG Connect has made a good point, one that doesn’t always occur to those of us who work with robots all the time. Most people don’t really know what robots are or what they do. That’s what makes them exciting — and scary. A decade ago, parents got all excited about robotic… Read more »

European Soccer, Thanks to Rexroth

The Caja Magica in Madrid. The Amsterdam ArenA. The GelreDome in Arnhem. The Veltins-Arena in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. What do all these stadiums have in common? Besides soccer, that is. Rexroth motion control moves their roofs and stands. Gigantic retractable roofs keep fans dry — and adjustable stands open the space up for bigger games and… Read more »

Henry Ford and Robot Production

Henry Ford might not have been the first to develop the assembly line, but he popularized it and brought it to public consciousness. He also made cars affordable for the average person. So it may not be surprising that Toyota researchers are referencing Henry Ford when they talk about making affordable robots. Japan has a… Read more »

Brexit and Manufacturing

Britain is getting ready to vote on the serious question of whether they should leave the European Union. The EU, like the United States, is a group of political entities that have agreed to share currency. Its members can travel freely from one member state to another, they can work anywhere, retire anywhere and draw… Read more »

New Data on the Skills Gap

One of the frustrations for people in the mental health field is that most treatments for mental illness tend to break out like this: One third of the patients get better. One third get worse. One third stay the same.   You can say this in a happy way, like, “One third of patients treated… Read more »

Smart Factory: Local or Global?

Our vision of the smart factory is often focused on global connections. Information swooshes across the global supply chain. Virtual reality provides training and remote repair brings experts to machines before they break down, as each component takes responsibility for its own monitoring and service. Rexroth points out in a recent article that this vision,… Read more »

Connected World

Excited about the Internet of Things? Then check out Connected World, the Internet of Things Conference.  One session took place in Berlin in March and the next one is coming up in Chicago in September. Registration is open now. One of the features in Berlin was a hackathon session in which participants tried out new… Read more »

Industrial Future Megatrends

Industry Week has identified three megatrends in manufacturing that will affect us all in the near future. New technologies Industry 4.0, the Industrial Internet of Things, additive manufacturing, cabinet-free servos, nanotechnology, collaborative robots, virtual reality — and much, much more. We’re seeing an explosion of disruptive technology in manufacturing. It’s exciting, but it’s also a… Read more »

Manufacturing and Restaurants Converge?

Keith Campbell of On the Edge visited the NRA trade show and got a surprise. No, not that NRA — the National Restaurant Association, where he was surprised to find servos and sensors and robots and 3-D printers on the trade show floor. On asking around, Campbell learned that “increasing complexity of the industry, lack… Read more »