Ihre Suche nach:
4 Ergebnis(se) in 0.03 s
-
DUKAS_184965083_FER
Plan for humanoid robot shipyard workers.
Ferrari Press Agency
Welding robots 1
Ref 16829
19/05/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Persona AI
A startup robotics company has signed a deal to provide humanoid shipyard workers.
The robots will be capable of performing complex welding tasks.
US-based Persona AI will lead the development of hardware and AI-based control and learning.
A spokesperson explained: “Shipyards report attrition rates of 20–22% among average workers, with critical trades experiencing rates as high as 30% or more.
“Additionally, recruitment programs have struggled to retain new hires, with reports indicating that 50–60% of first-year shipyard employees leave within their first year.
“Persona’s purpose-built humanoids have the dexterity and toughness to execute critical shipbuilding tasks so that humans don’t have to.”
Co-founder and CEO Nicolaus Radford, a former NASA employee, has previously declared: “Humanoids are the holy grail of all robotics.
"It's what every science fiction writer's always dreamed about.”
OPS: Render of planned Persona AI robots. The company eventually sees their robots branching out to a rangee of jobs, not just welding.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_184965077_FER
Plan for humanoid robot shipyard workers.
Ferrari Press Agency
Welding robots 1
Ref 16829
19/05/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Persona AI
A startup robotics company has signed a deal to provide humanoid shipyard workers.
The robots will be capable of performing complex welding tasks.
US-based Persona AI will lead the development of hardware and AI-based control and learning.
A spokesperson explained: “Shipyards report attrition rates of 20–22% among average workers, with critical trades experiencing rates as high as 30% or more.
“Additionally, recruitment programs have struggled to retain new hires, with reports indicating that 50–60% of first-year shipyard employees leave within their first year.
“Persona’s purpose-built humanoids have the dexterity and toughness to execute critical shipbuilding tasks so that humans don’t have to.”
Co-founder and CEO Nicolaus Radford, a former NASA employee, has previously declared: “Humanoids are the holy grail of all robotics.
"It's what every science fiction writer's always dreamed about.”
OPS: Render of planned Persona AI robots. The company eventually sees their robots branching out to a rangee of jobs, not just welding.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_184965075_FER
Plan for humanoid robot shipyard workers.
Ferrari Press Agency
Welding robots 1
Ref 16829
19/05/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Persona AI
A startup robotics company has signed a deal to provide humanoid shipyard workers.
The robots will be capable of performing complex welding tasks.
US-based Persona AI will lead the development of hardware and AI-based control and learning.
A spokesperson explained: “Shipyards report attrition rates of 20–22% among average workers, with critical trades experiencing rates as high as 30% or more.
“Additionally, recruitment programs have struggled to retain new hires, with reports indicating that 50–60% of first-year shipyard employees leave within their first year.
“Persona’s purpose-built humanoids have the dexterity and toughness to execute critical shipbuilding tasks so that humans don’t have to.”
Co-founder and CEO Nicolaus Radford, a former NASA employee, has previously declared: “Humanoids are the holy grail of all robotics.
"It's what every science fiction writer's always dreamed about.”
OPS: Render of planned Persona AI robots. The company eventually sees their robots branching out to a rangee of jobs, not just welding.
Picture supplied by Ferrari
(FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_119952632_TOP
Mono Negative
NEW PLATES FOR ' WASHINGTON '
Pictured here in the NO.6 drydock at Southampton welders repairing plates on the bow of the United States liner ' Washington' (29, 627 tons ). The liner split her bow when she hit the quay wall in Friday's Gale at Southampton.
5 February 1950 (FOTO:DUKAS/TOPFOTO)
TopFoto