
The intersection of robotics and AI continues to draw consideration from buyers and Huge Tech alike. The most recent indicator? Dexterity, a startup specializing in industrial robots with “human-like” finesse, has raised $95 million at a post-money valuation of $1.65 billion, per Bloomberg.
The funding, which incorporates backing from Lightspeed Enterprise Companions and Sumitomo Corp., highlights the rising demand for equipment powered by AI and comes amid a wave of pleasure from firms like Meta and Apple, that are reportedly exploring investments into AI-powered humanoid robots, and startups like humanoid robotic makers Figure AI and Apptronik which have lately secured huge funding rounds to develop robots for a wide range of duties.
As for Dexterity, its robots are designed to carry out repetitive and typically harmful duties in warehouses and factories, akin to loading packing containers and sorting parcels, for patrons that embrace FedEx and UPS. Founder and CEO Samir Menon tells Bloomberg the robots use specialised AI fashions, every targeted on a selected activity, coordinated by a central system. The outfit has now raised almost $300 million altogether.