The first robotic hand with touch.
The first robotic hand with touch.
Nothing suggested that we could come close to creating artificial touch as in human skin, but Xela Robotics insists on breaking that limit, where a sector divided between sophisticated hands and rigid industrial claws, the Japanese company took another route, not creating a new hand, but transforming its surface.
Not just if something is being held, but if it is spinning or slipping about to escape. The strategy aligns with the tradition of the University of Guaseda, where Xela emerged, and with the renaissance of humanoid robotics in Japan. In the midst of industrial consortia and high-level research, the company reinforces the philosophy of hardware as a foundation, but it is the plan for 2026 that really moves the technological axis.
Posted Using INLEO
0
0
0.000
0 comments