Directory
1,885 companies with active robots on Robolist.ai. Sorted by number of active products. Search, filter, and click through to verified specs and scores.
Diego-san is a humanoid robot designed to study cognitive and social development in infants. Developed by researchers at UC San Diego's Machine Perception Laboratory under professor Javier Movellan, the robot is modeled after a 1-year-old baby with an oversized head to house expressive facial hardware. The body was built by Japanese animatronic company Kokoro and the head by Hanson Robotics. Diego-san is used for research into infant cognition and social interaction.
Expressive humanoid robots for research and education
RoMeLa (Robotics and Mechanisms Laboratory) is a research facility at UCLA's Henry Samueli School of Engineering focused on humanoid robot development and bipedal locomotion. The lab designs full-sized autonomous humanoid robots including CHARLI (Cognitive Humanoid Autonomous Robot with Learning Intelligence), the first full-size autonomous humanoid robot in the United States, and ARTEMIS (Advanced Robotic Technology for Enhanced Mobility and Improved Stability). RoMeLa's robots are designed as research platforms for studying robot mobility, autonomy, and locomotion over uneven terrain, with applications in RoboCup soccer competition.
Open-source full-sized humanoid robot for dynamic locomotion and locomanipulation
Precision laser welding machines for stainless steel, aluminum, and complex components
Thailand's Leading Robot Manufacturer and Service Expert
Unimation was the world's first robotics company, founded by Joseph F. Engelberger and George Devol. It developed and manufactured Unimate, the first industrial robot—a hydraulic manipulator arm installed on General Motors assembly lines in 1961 for tasks like metalworking and welding. It licensed Unimate technology to Kawasaki in 1968-1969 for the Asian market. Later acquired by Westinghouse and then Staublí.
One Brain. Any Robot. AI-powered robotics for warehouse automation.
Momaro is a mobile manipulation robot developed by the University of Bonn's Autonomous Intelligent Systems lab. It features hybrid wheeled-legged locomotion with four legs ending in steerable wheels, a sensor head with 3D laser scanner and eight RGB-D cameras, and dual-arm manipulation capabilities. Designed for disaster response and harsh environments, it competed in the DARPA Robotics Challenge 2015, placing fourth.
Salto-1P is a one-legged jumping robot developed by the Biomimetic Millisystems Lab at UC Berkeley, inspired by the lesser bushbaby. The robot uses a springy leg, reaction wheel tail, and propeller thrusters to achieve continuous high-power hopping and autonomous navigation on imperfect terrain. It is a research platform rather than a commercial robotics company product.
GuRoo is a humanoid robot developed at the Mobile Robotics Laboratory in the School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering at the University of Queensland; it is a research platform rather than a commercial product from a robotics company.
Unknown Needs™ manufactures BALLBOT™ PRO, a home robotics product featuring AI-powered voice control, seamless mobility, and auto capture capabilities.
Advanced robotics for a dynamic world
Bandit is a humanoid robot developed by the Robotics and Autonomous Systems Center (RASC) at USC, designed as an expressive tool for human-robot interaction. The robot's body consists of servo-motors and rapid-prototyped parts. Its updated design and fabrication were performed by BlueSky Robotics, building upon techniques from the successful Bandit-I implementation.
Autonomous UV‑C disinfection robots for hospitals and pharmaceutical environments
The Scripps Tensor Arm is a historical continuum robot with 16 degrees of freedom, conceived by Victor C. Anderson at the Marine Physical Laboratory (MPL) of the Scripps Institute of Oceanography in 1968. It is a spine-like elephant trunk arm design and is not currently manufactured by any active robotics company. The search results indicate it is a historical artifact documented in robotics archives, not a product line of an operating firm.
Daheng Imaging manufactures the MER2 series USB3.0 Vision industrial cameras, including the MER2-630-60U3C model equipped with Sony IMX178 CMOS color sensor (6.3MP, 3088x2064 resolution at 60fps, rolling shutter, compact 29x29mm housing). These cameras target machine vision applications in robotics, industrial automation, and inspection systems. Products are sold via suppliers in China (e.g., Guangdong) and international distributors like VA Imaging.
Autonomous mobile robots for material handling workflows