The manufacturing industry is undergoing a significant transformation as artificial intelligence-powered robots rise to address persistent challenges such as labor shortages, reshoring initiatives, and the need for greater operational consistency. At Automate 2025, North America’s largest robotics and automation event, leading robotics companies—including KUKA, Standard Bots, Universal Robots, and Vention—are unveiling advanced hardware and solutions powered by NVIDIA’s accelerated computing platforms and artificial intelligence software ecosystems such as Omniverse and Isaac. NVIDIA is providing the technological foundation to enhance automation and optimize production lines worldwide, highlighted by a keynote from Deepu Talla, vice president of robotics and edge artificial intelligence at NVIDIA, who underscored the industry’s shift toward software-defined, autonomous industrial facilities enabled by NVIDIA’s three-part architecture: robot training, simulation, and accelerated runtime.
Among the key advancements spotlighted is synthetic data generation, a breakthrough for embodied artificial intelligence systems, which require large, diverse datasets for effective training. NVIDIA Isaac Lab 2.1, introduced during Automate, accelerates robot training by enabling the creation of customized synthetic motion and manipulation datasets through the NVIDIA Isaac GR00T Blueprint. Built atop NVIDIA Omniverse and Cosmos world foundation models, this workflow allows developers to produce large volumes of training data efficiently, reducing dependence on costly and time-consuming real-world data collection while supporting a wide variety of robotic applications.
Leading robotics firms are leveraging NVIDIA’s platforms to push industrial automation forward. Universal Robots launched the UR15, its fastest collaborative robot to date, powered by NVIDIA Jetson AGX Orin and NVIDIA Isaac’s CUDA-accelerated machine learning models. Vention introduced MachineMotion AI, a controller unifying motion, sensing, vision, and artificial intelligence, to enable complex, compute-intensive tasks on the shop floor. Standard Bots presented a heavy-duty manipulator with tablet-based teleoperation and task demonstration enabled by NVIDIA Isaac Sim, allowing for low-code deployment of advanced capabilities. KUKA debuted its compact KR C5 Micro-2 controller, integrating NVIDIA Jetson for enhanced artificial intelligence vision and control in future robotic deployments.
Beyond hardware, NVIDIA is advancing software to deploy artificial intelligence agents across industrial environments. The NVIDIA AI Blueprint for Video Search and Summarization (VSS), part of the NVIDIA Metropolis platform, enables the deployment of intelligent agents to optimize operations and enhance safety by analyzing streams of factory and warehouse video data. Partners such as Siemens, Connect Tech, DeepHow, InOrbit.AI, and KoiReader Technologies are pioneering the use of VSS in real-world scenarios, ranging from workflow optimization and natural-language assistants to real-time drone hazard detection and intelligent shop floor training. At Automate 2025, NVIDIA and its ecosystem of partners are offering talks and demonstrations that explore the transformative role of artificial intelligence in industrial automation, digital twins, and robotics orchestration.