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Website: https://indrorobotics.com/
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Email: [email protected]
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Phone: 1-844-464-6376
InDro Robotics is a Canadian engineering firm specializing in autonomous robots and drones for complex missions, including R&D, data collection, surveillance, delivery, precision agriculture, inspection, and security. They integrate and enhance platforms like AgileX UGVs with InDro Commander (local compute, 4G/5G teleop, GPS/SLAM autonomy-ready), Unitree quadrupeds/humanoids with InDro Backpack, and UAVs with InDro Pilot for BVLOS operations, supporting ROS/ROS2 and custom autonomy development.
RSF defines a common language for robot service capability, lifecycle operations, certification pathways, and service-provider networks.
InDro Robotics has launched the Axiom, a modular humanoid-style robotic platform aimed at facilitating Physical AI research. Announced on July 10, 2026, this budget-friendly solution is designed to lower the barriers for researchers and academic institutions in developing advanced robotics applications. Initial customer units are already being shipped, indicating strong market interest. The Axiom platform is significant as it democratizes access to humanoid robotics, which has traditionally been limited to well-funded organizations. By providing a more affordable option, InDro Robotics is positioning itself to capture a wider audience in the research community, potentially accelerating advancements in Physical AI technologies. This move aligns with the growing demand for accessible robotics solutions across various sectors. Looking ahead, InDro Robotics aims to expand its customer base and enhance the Axiom's capabilities based on user feedback. No further timeline was disclosed at the time of publication, but the initial shipping of units suggests a proactive approach to market engagement and product iteration.
RoboticsTomorrow.com Jul 09, 2026Military robotics is no longer a U.S.-centric story. Global defence spending crossed $2.75 trillion in 2026; defence-tech VC hit a record $49.1 billion in 2025; and a multipolar robotics order is crystallising in real time — with China’s 15th Five-Year Plan institutionalising civil-military fusion, Europe’s €381 billion defence budget financing its own AI champions, and Turkey and Israel reshaping the export market with affordable, combat-proven systems. Part Five of the Future Warfare Series maps the country-by-country competitive landscape, the collapsing regulation race, and the investment forces reshaping who builds — and who controls — the autonomous weapons of the next decade.
ByThomas Siew May 22, 2026Anduril’s YFQ-44A Fury flew its first semi-autonomous mission on 31 October 2025 — 556 days from contract to flight. By February 2026 it was carrying live missiles and swapping autonomy software mid-flight. China’s Jiutian drone mothership flew on 11 December 2025, capable of releasing over 100 loitering munitions from its internal bay at 15,000 metres. And the U.S. Air Force is standing up its second experimental one-way attack drone unit for mid-2026. This article maps the most consequential aerial autonomous systems competition in history: the CCA programme that will determine U.S. air dominance in the 2030s, the Valkyrie’s surprising rebirth, the A-GRA open-architecture breakthrough, and the Chinese drone mothership that has no Western equivalent.
ByThomas Siew Apr 28, 2026Ukraine’s ‘Sub Sea Baby’ autonomous torpedo struck a Russian Kilo-class submarine inside Novorossiysk harbour in December 2025 — the first confirmed underwater drone attack on a submarine in history. The U.S. Navy is requesting $5.3 billion for unmanned maritime systems in FY2026, a 70 percent year-on-year increase. Saronic Technologies went from prototype to $392 million production contract in under 12 months. And DARPA’s Manta Ray XL-UUV completed full-scale sea trials. This article maps the maritime autonomous systems revolution — from Ukraine’s improvised Black Sea fleet to the Pentagon’s hybrid manned–unmanned force of the 2030s, and from Saronic’s Franklin, Louisiana shipyard to Boeing’s 85-tonne robot submarine.
ByThomas Siew Apr 20, 2026How the cost equation of modern warfare has inverted: a $500 AI-guided drone now rivals a $2 million precision missile in tactical effect. Part One of the Future Warfare Series examines the unit economics, supply chain realities, and venture capital forces reshaping defence procurement — from Ukraine's 1.7 million FPV drones to Anduril's $30 billion factory-as-weapon bet.
ByThomas Siew Mar 11, 2026Unmanned underwater vehicles are moving from niche tools to core naval assets as China, the U.S., and East Asia accelerate UUV swarms, XLUUVs, and undersea autonomy.
ByRobotToday Reporter Sep 27, 2025
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