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Nvidia continues its expansion into robotics software with Mega an Omniverse Blueprint designed specifically for robotic fleet management at scale. The offering, announced at CES Monday, specifically targets warehouses, a space that saw massive robotics adoption during the pandemic. Even so, most still lack significant automation.
Companies like Locus Robotics have made significant headway in this world, with fleets of autonomous mobile robotics. Ultimately, however, the future of warehouse automation isn’t a single company or solution.
It’s an ecosystem wherein robotics of various form factors can work in tandem to get the job done. That includes AMRs, robotic arms, autonomous forklifts, and, possibly, humanoids. Efficient, robot agnostic fleet management remains a holy grail for this world, and Nvidia is as well positioned as anyone to address the need.
“Mega offers enterprises a reference architecture of Nvidia accelerated computing, AI, Nvidia Isaac and Nvidia Omniverse technologies to develop and test digital twins for testing AI-powered robot brains that drive robots, video analytics AI agents, equipment and more for handling enormous complexity and scale,” the chipmaker notes. “The new framework brings software-defined capabilities to physical facilities, enabling continuous development, testing, optimization, and deployment.”
Mega develops digital twins of robotic systems and settings, in a bid to determine optimal routes and workflows for robotics systems. German supply chain firm, Kion Group, is the first to official adopt Mega for its workflows.
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Brian Heater is the Hardware Editor at TechCrunch. He worked for a number of leading tech publications, including Engadget, PCMag, Laptop, and Tech Times, where he served as the Managing Editor. His writing has appeared in Spin, Wired, Playboy, Entertainment Weekly, The Onion, Boing Boing, Publishers Weekly, The Daily Beast and various other publications. He hosts the weekly Boing Boing interview podcast RiYL, has appeared as a regular NPR contributor and shares his Queens apartment with a rabbit named Juniper.
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