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The race to power Europe’s warehouses with robots

The robot arms train every night. About half a dozen of them, flexing in silence. They practise picking up items thousands of times over, to test whether their latest algorithms are working as intended. And in the morning, Nomagic’s engineers turn up for work to check how the machines did. “This is a never-ending effort,” says CEO Tristan d’Orgeval. If the robot arms performed as intended, the updated algorithms get uploaded to the Warsaw-headquartered company’s live system.  Nomagic currently has 70 employees and has raised $39 million to date. Right now, dozens of the firm’s robot arms are toiling away…This story continues at The Next Web

The robot arms train every night. About half a dozen of them, flexing in silence. They practise picking up items thousands of times over, to test whether their latest algorithms are working as intended. And in the morning, Nomagic’s engineers turn up for work to check how the machines did. “This is a never-ending effort,” says CEO Tristan d’Orgeval. If the robot arms performed as intended, the updated algorithms get uploaded to the Warsaw-headquartered company’s live system.  Nomagic currently has 70 employees and has raised $39 million to date. Right now, dozens of the firm’s robot arms are toiling away…

This story continues at The Next Web

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