Fox News correspondent Brooke Taylor details how AI bots are filling the workforce gap in a special report.
as artificial intelligence As the industry rapidly evolves, Fox News has exclusive coverage of companies across the country that are leveraging AI-powered robots to help increase efficiency and fill workforce gaps.
With 36 locations across the country and headquarters in Texas, RobotLAB houses more than 50 different types of robots, from cleaning bots and customer service bots to security bots.
Robots can be used in almost every industry, from caring for dementia patients in nursing homes and delivering meals in restaurants and hotels, to handling box deliveries in warehouses, to entering burning buildings to protect firefighters.
CEO Elad Inbal says: cleaning robot The most popular of these is its ability to clean hundreds of thousands of square feet a day. It is being introduced at hospitals, airports, supermarkets, etc. across the country.
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Texas-based robotics company RobotLAB is harnessing the power of AI to fill critical gaps across a variety of industries. (Fox News/Fox News)
Inbar partners with companies across the country to supply robots tailored to each company’s needs and teach owners how to effectively use AI and adapt to automation. He emphasizes that while nothing can replace human emotion, AI robots can fill the workforce gap by taking on jobs that no one else wants to do.
“We have robots that can be delivered endlessly, and they do things like put out fires. So they’re very capable, but there’s a labor shortage,” Inbar said. “People don’t want to do these jobs. And when people don’t want to do those jobs, we have a solution that can actually help business owners.”
Inbal believes this. The next big step in AI Humanoid robots are already progressing rapidly. He believes that by the end of the decade, humanoid robots will be in homes, able to cook, clean, and perform any maintenance repairs.
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RobotLAB CEO Elad Inbar aims to have AI-powered humanoid robots able to perform tasks in the home by the end of this decade. (Fox News/Fox News)
“This is something we haven’t seen in 18 years, at least since we were founded. [have been] I run this company,” Inbar said. “Advances in hardware and software have made humanoid robots very capable. In fact, robots can understand reality and understand our environment. When you ask a robot to clean the table, it understands what should go in the trash and what should go in the dishwasher.”
Recently, the president donald trump Signed an executive order aimed at preventing states from over-regulating AI. Inbar says this is essential for companies to remain competitive in the AI race, particularly with China. He emphasizes protecting people’s privacy, but warns that overregulation could stifle innovation and put the United States at a disadvantage.
“It affects everything national security“Productivity, even the ability to sustain our lives in terms of power consumption and all sorts of other aspects,” Inbar said. “So these are the things we need AI to solve, collaborate with us, and be the first to do it.” Because if you’re not first, you’ll be last. ”
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Inbar says AI is critical to things like national security and productivity. (Fox News/Fox News)
RobotLAB also partners with two-thirds of school districts; Educators and the young generation Evolve with AI.
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“We develop curriculum, we develop lesson plans, we develop activities, we do professional development for teachers so that they can use these types of technologies to enhance their lessons,” Inbar said. “We’ve created an entire curriculum that uses commonplace robots like robotic arms to teach kids things like trigonometry, physics, and math.”