According to roboticsandautomationnews.com, PAL Robotics is set to unveil a new robotic platform for advanced manipulation tasks at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA 2026), taking place in Vienna, Austria, from June 1 to 5, 2026.
Live Demonstrations and Real-World Focus
The company will host interactive demonstrations at booth 067, emphasizing direct user engagement over passive observation. PAL Robotics states its focus this year is on demonstrating how robots can move from research environments into real-world applications. The demonstrations aim to show how technologies such as teleoperation, data collection, and embodied AI can be combined to accelerate development and deployment.
New Platform and Portfolio Highlights
A central part of the showcase will be the launch of a new robot designed specifically for advanced manipulation tasks. The platform is intended to serve as a flexible tool for both research and commercial applications, enabling teams to adapt it to different use cases and workflows.
Alongside the new system, PAL Robotics will present its existing portfolio, including:
- The TIAGo Pro mobile manipulator, demonstrating integrated navigation, manipulation, and perception—with emphasis on teleoperation and data generation for AI training;
- The Kangaroo humanoid platform, showcasing advances in locomotion, whole-body control, and reinforcement learning in dynamic environments.
The company says these demonstrations reflect a broader goal of enabling robots to operate outside controlled settings and in more complex, real-world scenarios.
Company Background and Industry Context
PAL Robotics, founded in 2004, develops service and humanoid robots for research and industrial applications. According to the source, the company has participated in more than 60 collaborative robotics projects worldwide. This track record aligns with a growing industry trend: major players like Amazon (with Proteus and Digit), Toyota (with T-HR3 and recent humanoid investments), and Hyundai (via Boston Dynamics acquisitions) are intensifying R&D in mobile manipulation and humanoid platforms—particularly for logistics, warehousing, and last-mile support. For supply chain professionals, such systems signal a tangible shift toward hybrid human-robot workflows where dexterity, adaptability, and real-time decision-making are critical in unstructured environments like distribution centers, cross-dock facilities, and retail backrooms.
Source: Robotics & Automation News
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










