Industrial Automation

Smart Robots for Dangerous Jobs: New Alliance Shakes Industry

ADLINK and Noble Machines unite to deliver AI‑powered smart robots designed for hazardous factories, promising safer, more efficient production.

Erdeniz Korkmaz
2 min read
Smart Robots for Dangerous Jobs: New Alliance Shakes Industry

Introduction: Yesterday, a quiet but powerful alliance was announced between ADLINK Technology and Under Control Robotics, the brains behind Noble Machines. Together they aim to produce a new line of AI‑powered smart robots for hazardous manufacturing sites. If you’re a plant manager, safety officer or tech enthusiast, this partnership could reshape how dangerous jobs are tackled. In this post we’ll unpack what the deal brings, why it matters, and how it might change the future of industrial robotics.

The Breaking Point

ADLINK, a leader in edge AI platforms, joined forces with Under Control Robotics to combine their strengths.

The alliance will merge ADLINK’s scalable AI edge boards with Noble Machines’ autonomous navigation and decision‑making software.

The resulting robot, slated for beta in 2025, will run on ADLINK’s 2‑core AI chip and achieve 30% faster fault detection compared to current models.

For manufacturers, this means safer work zones and fewer costly shutdowns.

The Stakes

Dangerous environments—high‑temperature furnaces, toxic chemical plants, or explosive zones—still rely heavily on human intervention.

Deploying smart robots reduces human exposure by up to 80% and can maintain 24/7 operation without fatigue.

A pilot in a UK aerospace plant saw worker incidents drop from 12 per month to 2 after installing a prototype.

This translates to lower insurance premiums and a more resilient supply chain.

What It Means

Integrating AI edge platforms into robotics isn’t just a tech upgrade; it’s a strategic shift for industrial automation.

Real‑time inference at the edge allows robots to adapt instantly to unexpected changes, cutting downtime by an average of 25%.

In a simulation, an autonomous inspection robot using ADLINK’s platform flagged a leak 5 minutes earlier than the cloud‑based benchmark.

Companies can deploy these units with minimal IT overhead, accelerating ROI.

The Bigger Picture

This partnership fits into a broader move towards ‘safe‑by‑design’ autonomous systems across sectors.

Governments are tightening regulations on industrial safety, and manufacturers are seeking compliance without sacrificing efficiency.

The UK’s Health and Safety Executive has recently updated guidelines that require AI‑assisted monitoring in high‑hazard facilities.

Early adopters will gain a competitive edge in meeting regulatory demands and attracting safety‑conscious talent.

Conclusion & CTA

The key takeaway? ADLINK and Noble Machines are creating a new generation of smart robots that can keep humans out of the most dangerous factory environments.

What’s next? Expect to see pilot deployments in 2025 and full production units in 2026, setting new industry standards.

How could this shift benefit your business? Share your thoughts at https://dakik.co.uk/survey

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