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It's started: Robot Uprising Begins as China Turns to Machines to Fill in Gaps in the Workforce

WATCH: Cute Robots Sort 200,000 Packages a Day in Chinese Warehouse

By Matthew Bossons, April 12, 2017

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If you have spent any amount of time in China, you have likely engaged in an online shopping spree or two and experienced firsthand the speed and efficiency of the country’s delivery system.

But now, thanks to a captivating video circulating online, you can witness what’s going on behind the scenes while you are eagerly awaiting that new gadget you ordered off Taobao.

The footage profiles a Chinese delivery company that uses self-charging robots to sort through a staggering 200,000 packages per day in their warehouse.

The robots run 24 hours a day and use a code-scanning system to ensure packages are moved to the right location. These codes, according to a People’s Daily Facebook post, virtually eliminate sorting errors.

Watch the shipping robots in action below (VPN off):

https://www.thatsmags.com/china/pos...t-200-000-packages-a-day-in-chinese-warehouse
 
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WATCH: Cute Robots Sort 200,000 Packages a Day in Chinese Warehouse
the robots are developed and supplied by the Chinese company Hikvision (海康威视). Hikvision is a global leading player of video surveillance solution. The company is now leveraging its expertise on image recognition to expand to the robotics area. What we see now is just a tiny example of its robotics portfolio.
 
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WATCH: Cute Robots Sort 200,000 Packages a Day in Chinese Warehouse
I always pay attention to rising robotics and automation in industrial sector, not aware of such trend also develops so fast in services sector like logistics, good news!

Robots to go fishing in Dalian
Robotics in agricultural/fisheries sector, interesting.
 
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I always pay attention to rising robotics and automation in industrial sector, not aware of such trend also develops so fast in services sector like logistics, good news!
Robotics nowadays not only work in such "small" warehouses, but also work in huge ports.

Check the following video, start from 43min30sec. China's ZPMC (振华港机) is developing and producing AGVs (Automatic Guided Vehicles) for key ports in China!

We know ZPMC is already the king of harbor cranes; its next target is to become king of harbor AGVs.

 
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Robotics nowadays not only work in such "small" warehouses, but also work in huge ports.

Check the following video, start from 43min30sec. China's ZPMC (振华港机) is developing and producing AGVs (Automatic Guided Vehicles) for key ports in China!

We know ZPMC is already the king of harbor cranes; its next target is to become king of harbor AGVs.

Exactly, ZPMC has overwhelming lead globally, Shanghai power!
http://ez.zpmc.com/products/automation_en.aspx

ZPMC now is building the 1st Fully Automated Port in Qingdao (青岛). Other than Chinese ports, propects for SINGA (Sustainable Integrated Next Generation Advanced) port concept include Busan (SK), Dubai, Singapore and hopefully Colombo.
 
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Chinese scientists build soft robotic fish

Xinhua, April 12, 2017

Chinese scientists from eastern China's Zhejiang Province have created a soft robotic fish with no motor and a fast speed.

"The robot is expected to be used underwater to record the temperature and salinity of the sea and detect pollutants," said Li Tiefeng, an associate professor at Zhejiang University.

The 9.3-centimeter-long fish weighs 90 grams and has an electric controller at the core, fins made of silicone, and a silicone body and tail. All components are transparent except for a small battery pack and two electromagnets.

"The soft and transparent body will make it easy for the robot to sneak through narrow reefs without being damaged or detected by other sea creatures," he said.

Instead of being powered by traditional rigid motors, the fish is built with artificial muscle, stimuli-responsive polymers that can bend or stretch under a cyclic voltage provided by the embedded lithium battery.

"Soft artificial muscle can respond quickly to electricity, meaning faster fin flapping and greater speed," Li said.

At top speed, the robot can swim six centimeters per second, beating the previous record for soft untethered underwater robots by three centimeters per second.

With a tethered exterior power supply, the fish can swim up to 14 centimeters per second, about the same speed as similar-sized fish.

"The materials used in the robot are common, cheap and environment friendly, with the potential to be produced on a large scale in China," Li said. "Our next step is to improve the efficiency of the artificial muscle and develop key techniques for mass production."

The findings were published in the academic journal Scientific Advances earlier this month.

http://china.org.cn/china/2017-04/12/content_40607155.htm
 
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Chinese firm halves worker costs by hiring army of robots to sort out 200,000 packages a day

The machines are cheaper than human workers and are also more efficient and accurate in sorting out parcels, spokesman says
PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 11 April, 2017, 12:10pm

A viral video showing an army of little orange robots sorting out packages in a warehouse in eastern China is the latest example of how machines are increasingly taking over menial factory work on the mainland.

The behind-the-scenes footage of the self-charging robot army in a sorting centre of Chinese delivery powerhouse Shentong (STO) Express was shared on People’s Daily’s social media accounts on Sunday.

The video showed dozens of round orange Hikvision robots – each the size of a seat cushion – swivelling across the floor of the large warehouse in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province.

A worker was seen feeding each robot with a package before the machines carried the parcels away to different areas around the sorting centre, then flipping their lids to deposit them into chutes beneath the floor.

The robots identified the destination of each package by scanning a code on the parcel, thus minimising sorting mistakes, according to the video.

The machines can sort up to 200,000 packages a day and are self-charging, meaning they can operate around the clock.

An STO Express spokesman told the South China Morning Post on Monday that the robots had helped the company save half the costs it typically required to use human workers.

They also improved efficiency by around 30 per cent and maximised sorting accuracy, he said.

“We use these robots in two of our centres in Hangzhou right now,” the spokesman said. “We want to start using these across the country, especially in our bigger centres.”

Although the machines could run around the clock, they were presently used only for about six or seven hours each time from 6pm, he said.

Manufacturers across China have been increasingly replacing human workers with machines.

The output of industrial robots in the country grew 30.4 per cent last year.

In the country’s latest five-year plan, the central government set a target aiming for annual production of these robots to reach 100,000 by 2020.

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/soci...cuts-costs-hiring-army-robots-sort-out-200000
 
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China's first combat robot competition wins many fans
2017-04-17 10:38 Global Times Editor: Li Yan

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Enthusiasts try their hand at robot combat. (Photos: Li Hao/GT)

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A boy imitates a robot. (Photo: Li Hao/GT)

"Come on! Come on! Yes!" shouted the audience.

Eyes glued to the stage, they were watching Major League FMB (Fighting My Bots), the first ever combat robot competition in China. Held in Beijing on the weekend of April 8 and 9, the competition saw 12 clubs competing for top honors. To win, their robots needed to either knock out their opponent's robot or get a higher performance score than their opponent in a three-minute, one-on-one fight.

Although some Chinese are fans of Western combat robot shows, such as Britain's Robot Wars and the US' BattleBots, this was the first time that they got to see the combat firsthand, and they seemed really engrossed in the battles.

Getting into the game

Fresh off their win on the morning of April 9, the five members of Shanghai club Sixth Universe Speed crowded around a screen that showed a live feed from the fighting area where a game between their soon-to-be opponent and another team was taking place.

They wanted to check out what their opponent's robot could do before their robot The Railgun went up against it in the afternoon.

At the end of the event, The Railgun had won four matches in a row and nabbed first place.

The five members behind the robot are all from the Shanghai Manufacturing and Robotics Laboratory at Shanghai University.

They started to make robots at the end of last year, and it took them about two months to prepare for the competition, including designing and assembling the robot.

Tong Zhaodong, one of the five members and the designer in the team, conceded that there were a few challenges while he was designing the robot.

The biggest one, he said, was a lack of parts and equipment to build with, as the competition was the first of its kind in China, which meant that it was hard to find professional equipment.

He added that the robot was so heavy that it took three of them to lift it.

"It has great destructive force, unlike some of the robots in other previous showcases that could be lifted by one person and were not very powerful," he said.

According to the team leader Huang Zhihui, he and his teammates decided to participate in the competition because they wanted to stand out from other laboratories and institutions that mostly use robots as a gimmick to get the public's attention.

"What we are trying to do is to combine learning with production and research," he said.

Yang Shouchen, another team member, agreed. He said the team is attempting to put theory into practice.

Besides combat robots, they have also worked hard to build other kinds of robots, such as service robots, flexible robots and medical robots, hoping to make a contribution to society.

Lu Jingjing, the CEO of Shanghai club Guanghuan, founded the club at the beginning of 2017 out of her interest in and great passion for robots.

It took her and her team members around three months to prepare their robot Azure Dragon for the competition.

She enjoyed the event a lot and thinks that it could attract young people.

"It is very interesting," she said. "It is a brilliant opportunity not only for excitement but also for brainstorming, as entrants study both their own robots and those of the other teams while competing."

As the only female participant, Lu said she hopes to expand the perceptions of what women can do in society.

"There is more to being a woman other than being a daddy's girl," she said. "Also, if more women participate in the competition, there will be more for the audience."

Growing awareness

Zhang Hongfei, the CEO of FMB, the Shanghai-based sports company that both founded and organized the Major League FMB, said that the fights between robots could be more hard-hitting and interesting than those between men as there is more to explore in the former, like the shapes of robots and the strategies being employed.

"The kind of competition my team and I are trying to hold is not one that can only be understood by experts, but one that the general public can enjoy," he said.

To attract public interest, Zhang held some competitions for amateurs and fans and provided small robots weighing two to three kilograms that could be controlled via phone to make it easier for new players to get started.

He also put on a robot camp where zero-based participants could make a 15-kilogram robot in eight weekends.

"There are events centers in Shanghai and Chongqing which are used to train, hold and promote competitions," he said.

"We will soon build one in Beijing."

The main motivation that drove him to focus on combat robots was his belief that robots and artificial intelligence will represent the most advanced level of the tech industry in the next 100 years.

He said his company plans to host more robot competitions in the near future, for example, the FMB World Cup in Shanghai in October where more than 20 teams from 16 countries and regions are expected to participate and three warm-up games in Nanchang, Jiangxi Province; Qinhuangdao, Hebei Province; and Hainan Province respectively.

Zhang said that the number of participants has been growing and expects the numbers to continue edging upward as more Chinese become aware of the competitions.

"It tripled this year compared with last year, and it doubled last year compared with the year before that," he said.

Passion knows no age

The event also attracted young kids and their parents. One little boy apparently got so excited by the robots that he sparked an interest in the adult friend of one of his parents.

Ma Feifei, a white-collar worker in Beijing, was amazed at her friend's 10-year-old son's response to the robots at the event. The child was so enthusiastic about the robots that he stayed inside the venue the whole day on April 8.

"He started to design robot models on a piece of paper after he went home that night," she said.

Inspired, Ma took her two-year-old son to the event the next day, but he was a little put out by all the flashing lights and loud sounds of metal hitting metal.

Leo, a 7-year-old boy who had been a fan of robots since his father bought him his first robot-related toy blocks as a child, was also thrilled by the robot showcase.

His father Zhang Chun, who works for a telecommunications company in Beijing, brought him to the game on April 9.

"We would have come yesterday if he had been available," Zhang said. "Robots with strange shapes fighting caught his attention. If we have time, I would be happy to bring him to more similar games."
 
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Internet-connected intelligent robot vendors to smarten industry up
2017-04-17 10:11 | China Daily | Editor: Wang Fan

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A woman interacts with a smart Magic Wand vendor in Guangzhou. (Photo by Zhu Yuanbin/China Daily)

Robot hawkers and smart automated vendors, anyone?

They can approach passersby, scan them for potential buyers, and make a customized sales pitch.

Such scenes may no longer belong to the realm of fantasy but become a reality sooner than later, say experts driving innovative internet-based technologies in China.

Unlike traditional vending machines found at public areas, an intelligent vending robot can interact with consumers and understand what each of them really needs.

"The vending robot can help companies better adjust their product mix and build a more market-oriented business by mining data on consumer habits," said Dai Jiabao, founder and chief executive officer of Guangdong Magic Wand Technology Co Ltd.

Magic Wand has developed an intelligent vending machine that will be tested at major public areas in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province, this month, according to Dai.

"Traditional retail companies need to introduce more internet-based technologies to upgrade their businesses. As a company engaged in research and development of intelligent facilities, we are willing to use the booming internet-based technologies to help traditional manufacturers to boost their sales."

According to Dai, Magic Wand will provide customized services for retailers, aiming to expand use of smart robots at major industrial areas.

The company has already signed purchasing agreements with a number of domestic companies in the fast moving consumer goods or FMCG industry, according to Dai.

"Internet-based technologies, which are used by intelligent vending machines, will help revitalize the manufacturing and retail sectors," said Dai.

A growing number of traditional manufacturing businesses in the Pearl River Delta have already harnessed internet-based technologies to upgrade themselves, especially their sales operations.

Stephen Tai, founder and chairman of Four Seas Group, a Hong Kong-based food company, said internet-based technologies have opened up new opportunities for the traditional manufacturing sector, driving the industry from low-end processing to advanced and intelligent manufacturing.

"We opened online trading services last year, which were well combined with our traditional business," said Tai.

Four Seas has 20 production plants in Hong Kong and the Chinese mainland, which distribute over 5,000 food products sourced from over 30 countries and regions.

In Guangzhou alone, Four Seas has opened 10 food processing plants, including a subsidiary dedicated to international trade and e-commerce.

"The booming internet-based technologies have helped expand our sales and product varieties. As a traditional food company, we are bracing for new challenges and opportunities in the internet era," said Tai.
 
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  • Some 800 robot makers seek scale as Chinese industry automates
  • JD.com, E-Deodar and Midea lead China’s charge for domination
Scenes from China’s quest to dominate the robotic future: At startup E-Deodar, a human-looking droid serves coffee to employees who are building $15,000 industrial bots that are about a third cheaper than foreign brands and are being used to automate assembly lines across the Pearl River Delta manufacturing hub.

Some 1,900 kilometers (1,200 miles) to the north, inside a lab at Beijing-based e-commerce giant JD.com Inc., a spider-like robot plunges down from its frame, seizes a book on a conveyor belt with its suctioned claws and hurls it into a crate. The machine can sort 3,600 objects an hour, four times as many as a person -- just one piece of the robotic technology the company’s developing to automate warehouses.

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Inside JD.com’s logistics base in Shanghai.

Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
China is embracing robotics with the same full-on intensity that’s made it a force in high-speed rail and renewable energy. Beijing economic planners view it as a stepping stone to a broader strategic goal: dominating emerging markets for artificial intelligence, driver-less vehicles and digitally-connected appliances and homes. “China has a great history of being an effective fast follower,” said Colin Angle, chief executive officer of Bedford, Massachusetts-based vacuum and defense robot maker iRobot Corp. “The question will be “‘Can they innovate?’”

Standing in the way are established robotics superpowers like Japan, South Korea, Germany and the U.S. Yet China has three big advantages--scale, growth momentum and money. It’s home to the world’s fastest-growing robotics market and vast manufacturing sector where companies are under pressure to automate. China overtook Japan in 2013 in unit sales domestically. Guangdong province, for example, announced in 2015 plans to offer 943 billion yuan ($137 billion) in subsidies to about 2,000 local companies, including both robot makers and those making autos, home appliances, and construction materials, that are looking to automate their plants.

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That creates a big opening for Chinese start-ups. “The mantle of leadership is wide open,” said Justin Rose, a partner and manufacturing expert with Boston Consulting Group in Chicago. “China has the ability to rise to prominence.”

To get there, China has a two-pronged strategy. President Xi Jinping’s government wants local industrial robotics makers like E-Deodar Robot Equipment Co., Anhui Efort Intelligent Equipment Co., and Siasun Robot & Automation Co. to take on foreign players including Japan’s Fanuc Corp. or California-based Adept Technology Inc. for leadership in the $11 billion market. Chinese corporate demand is expected to power double-digit demand for factory bots, according to Gudrun Litzenberger, General Secretary of the International Federation of Robotics. In 2016, China installed 90,000 new robots. That’s one-third of the world total and 30 percent more than the year before.

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A technician controls an E-Deodar industrial robot fitted with a mannequin hand on the testing line.

Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
Yet China’s ambitions go beyond factory robots that bolt and weld. Earlier this year, officials deployed a pollution-monitoring robot in the Zhengzhou East Railway Station, one of China’s busiest, and a Chinese deep-sea robot broke a new record, descending to 6,329 meters (21,000 feet) in the Mariana Trench in March. Xi, who in 2014 called for a “robot revolution,” was greeted by a droid when he visited a top science academy in Anhui province last year. “I’m very happy to see you, dear President. I wish you happiness every day,” said Jia Jia, who is also known as "robot goddess" for her good looks, the China Daily reported.

Right now, China lags rival nations when it comes to robot adoption. China had only 49 robots per 10,000 workers in 2015, versus 176 for the U.S., Germany’s 301 and South Korea’s world-leading 531. Yet if China’s robot build-out succeeds, it may be able to stanch the flow of factories moving overseas.

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Under a sweeping proposal called “Made in China 2025,” as well as a five-year robot plan launched last April, Beijing plans to focus on automating key sectors of the economy including car manufacturing, electronics, home appliances, logistics, and food production. At the same time, the government wants to increase the share of indigenous-branded robots in China to more than 50 percent of total sales volume by 2020 from 31 percent last year.

Robot makers and the companies that automate will be eligible for subsidies, low-interest loans, tax waivers, and rent-free land. “Fair or unfair, you can expect Chinese companies will get a lot of preferential treatment and funding,” said Rose with Boston Consulting. “They actually have a comprehensive plan to get there. And their track record isn’t terrible either.”

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An exhibitor dusts off a robot at the Mobile World Congress Shanghai in 2016.

Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
Industrial automation is crucial for China, home to an aging population and shrinking labor force. Manufacturing wages have more than doubled in the last decade. Also, younger Chinese workers, “don’t want to do repetitive work,” said James Li, President of ABB Robotics China, the local unit of Switzerland’s ABB Ltd. and one of the first robot companies to set up in China. It supplies machines that spray paint cars and man electronics assembly lines. “Robotics is hot,” said Li, who notes that local governments are investing heavily in industrial parks to develop the technology.

The Chinese productivity push is being watched with trepidation by global competitors. “They’re putting a lot of money and a lot of effort into automation and robotics in China. There’s nothing keeping them from coming after our market,” said John Roemisch, vice-president of sales and marketing for Fanuc America Corp.

Demand for robots in China is clear enough. Less certain is whether Chinese robotics companies have the tech savvy to compete globally. Lured by tax breaks and cheap land, some 800 Chinese robotics companies have set up shop. Trouble is, some startups buy key components from Siemens or Fanuc, put them in a robot shell with an arm, and then slap on a Chinese brand name, says Chai Yueting, director of the National Engineering Laboratory for E-Commerce Technologies at Tsinghua University.

“China has lots of robot companies. But their technology often is from the Japan or U.S.,” said Chai. “China’s own specific robot technology is still very limited.”

Overcrowded Field
Chai predicts that at least half of China’s robot makers will eventually shut their operations. An overcrowded field is a challenge the government has also acknowledged. China risks being inundated with low-end robotics, Xin Guobin, the vice minister of industry and information technology, was quoted as saying in state media in March.

Still, with China’s huge demand, its financial heft, and the government’s clear desire to develop, Chai predicts a handful of globally competitive Chinese robot makers are likely to emerge.

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Max Chu

Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
E-Deodar aims to become one of them. Launched in 2015 by Ningbo Techmation Co., the startup has lured Chinese engineers and software developers by recreating a Silicon Valley-style work climate.

“I want employees to feel like they are coming to Starbucks, not an office,” said Max Chu, the general manager who sports short-cropped hair and a casual sweater vest.

The two-year-old Foshan-based company in southern Guangdong province has already mastered the three basic building blocks of sophisticated automated machines: servomotors, drivers and control panels. Most Chinese companies acquire these components from foreign rivals.

Landmark Deal
Having its own proprietary technology brings down costs and drives sales of about 40 robots a month. This year’s revenues are expected to reach 50 million yuan ($7.27 million), five times that of 2016, he said. “People ask me, how long can you make robots? I say, it’s simple, we will make robots until there’s no more people in factories,” said Chu.

Chinese home appliance-maker Midea Group Co. has opted to buy its way into the robotics game. In early 2017, it closed its 3.7 billion euro ($4 billion) acquisition of Augsburg, Germany-based Kuka AG, a specialist in transport and automotive robots. The deal, which faced political opposition in Germany, allows Midea to automate and boost productivity in its white goods business, while “grabbing the opportunity” in the robotics industry that’s expanding exponentially, said Andy Gu.

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A Kuka industrial robotic arm pours a glass of beer during the Automatica trade fair in Munich in 2016.

Photographer: Martin Leissl/Bloomberg
“We need to leverage each other’s strengths to expand our business with each other,” said Gu, the Cornell-educated vice president who led the acquisition.

The Foshan company has started to build a research center in Louisville, Kentucky, and hopes to leverage the expertise of engineers at Kuka’s Robotics Research and Development Center in Austin, Texas, said Gu.

Meanwhile, Midea’s huge sales and distribution network can help Kuka, already one of the top three robot brands globally and in the Chinese market, move into new businesses. “We are going to expand into more industries to be more diversified,” said its German CEO Till Reuter in a March interview. “Midea will help us to open the doors.”

Jointly-developed robotic vacuum cleaners will be an early priority, followed by robots to meet the healthcare needs of China’s rapidly aging population, according to Midea’s Gu, who sees a big future market for machines designed for home use. Sales of domestic service robots in 2015 increased 16 percent to 5.4 million units, propelling a $2.2 billion market, according to the International Federation of Robotics. “If the base is big enough, and the costs really come down, then there is an opportunity to really move these products,” said Gu.

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Technicians adjust an E-Deodar industrial robot on the production line of a furniture company in Foshan.

Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

The biggest robotics market of them all in China may be logistics. While Amazon took the lead with its purchase of robot maker Kiva in 2012, JD.com is now rushing to automate its business, which is still reliant on tens of thousands of warehouse workers and deliverymen on trucks and motorcycles. It is using its own self-developed test drones to deliver packages in remote, rural regions of China and is experimenting with robots that deliver packages on college campuses.

The goal is near human-less warehouses. Eventually packages will be delivered via drones or driver-less vehicles, and facial recognition software will be used to prevent delivery errors, according to JD.com Chief Technology Officer Chen Zhang. “For the new wave in intelligent robots who can learn, who can get better faster,” the developments are just beginning, said Chen. “We are all just starting out really.”

The technology gap that must be overcome by Chinese robot-makers is still substantial, and it’s hard to imagine so many startup companies surviving long-term. However, foreign executives see China producing some globally competitive robotic companies eventually.

“As they learn how to compete, they’ll be a force to be reckoned with,” said Stuart Shepherd, CEO of Gudel Inc., the U.S. unit of the eponymous Swiss robot manufacturer.

— With assistance by Dexter Roberts, and Rachel Chang
https://www.bloomberg.com/amp/news/...tile-china-s-conquest-plan-for-robot-industry

 
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This is a promising trend, @Shotgunner51 . It is incredible that in merely three years the share of domestic content in industrial robots in China has reached 1/3 of the total.

Impressive development but never near to be enough.

The ratio should at least reverse in three-four years to 2/3 of the total being domestically made.

Besides, China still lags behind other developed nations in robot adaptation. But, as @Shotgunner51 said before, given the size of China, it is perhaps not quite right to compare with smaller scale countries/regions like SK or Taiwan Province.

The best benchmark is now to beat the US.
 
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It can fight on all fours and wields a staff
By Rob Thubron on May 1, 2017, 7:00 AM


It been a long time coming, but the giant robot battle between Boston-based Megabots’ Mark III and Japan’s Kuratas takes place this August. Now, China has decided it wants to join in on the fighting. Its Monkey King machine could enter the sport and may become the Mark III’s second opponent.

Megabots is still deciding whether to allow the Monkey King, which comes from Beijing’s Gunmetal, to compete. It was unveiled over the weekend at the capital city's national stadium, and as you can see in the promo video, it can fight on all fours or stand on hind legs when using its staff.

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Over 8000 backers raised almost $555,000 to help Magabots’ Mark II take on Suidobashi Heavy Industry’s Kuratas. That amount was some way short of the $1.5 million goal, but the bigger problem was that tests showed the machine’s operator was likely to be seriously injured during the battle, leading to the construction of a Mark III robot with “a safer cockpit, improved controls, and modular arms.”

The Mark III weighs 12 tons and is powered by a 430-horspower V8 engine. With Suidobashi Heavy Industry insisting on the fight being a hand-to-hand match, the Megabots team needed to make some changes to its original design. The 16-foot tall robot's new Heavy Lifting Arms can pick up a total of 2500 pounds.

China’s entry is seen as good news for all involved. It could result in more nations entering their own robot gladiators, and help achieve the ultimate goal: the creation of a robot fighting league

Related Reads
http://www.techspot.com/news/69140-...-machine-join-giant-robot.html#commentsOffset
 
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The progress of science and technology is very good, and now the robot may be just a toy, the future of robots can do dangerous work instead of people.
 
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