this post was submitted on 10 Nov 2023
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That’s just not true, more modern machines may have those safety features, but they aren’t on every thing.
Which again falls on the company not following proper safety, which was the point. This was a foreseeable problem, and the fact that the arm was “looking” for and able to reach for a box of “peppers”, means it was not in the right state to trouble shoot. If the device has no safety mechanisms that would allow safe maintenance then the machine must be replaced. But they don’t have good standards in a lot of countries.
Even in Canada and US legacy systems don’t have to be replaced with more modern ones, only when they are no longer usable and have to replaced do they need to meet new codes and standards.
Just because a new code comes out doesn’t mean every machine is suddenly obsolete…
There are only a few manufacturers of robotic arms, and have this feature as it is required by law in many countries. This was a new installation and I'll be happy to bet all sorts of money that it had it installed and wasn't used.
What model of arm was being used here? Because the article makes no mention and actually talks about a robot, so that sounds like something else than this “arm” you speak of.
There are more to robots than just “robotic arms”…. And to claim that those all have the features of a very specific model is quite frankly asinine.
In any industrial context, a "robot" is short for robotic arm. Those things you see in footage of automotive factories.
They also don't have any kind of AI. It's just a regular (if specialized) computer in control.
That’s just unequivocally wrong a robot is any complicated machine that can do a task. A palletizer is a type of robot and has zero arms.
And yeah they can have Ai or not, don’t change well established industry definitions to fit your narrative….