Components / NAOqi OS (Linux-based)
AI Single normalized label

NAOqi OS (Linux-based)

NAOqi OS (Linux-based) appears across 1 tracked robots, concentrated in Commercial. Use this page to understand why the signal matters, who relies on it most, and which live profiles deserve the first comparison click.

Tracked robots

1

Ready now

1

Manufacturers

1

Public prices

0

Why it matters

What it tends to unlock

Higher-level planning, adaptation, and interaction quality, richer autonomy claims that can change the shortlist materially, and more flexible task handling when the vendor stack is mature enough.

What to verify

Do not stop at the label

What runs on-device versus in the cloud, how branded AI labels map to real user-facing behavior, and whether updates and latency tradeoffs fit the intended job.

Coverage

1 category

The heaviest concentration is in Commercial (1). Top manufacturers include Aldebaran Robotics (1).

Research brief

Research first. Sweep the roster second.

The useful questions here are how common NAOqi OS (Linux-based) really is, which robot classes depend on it, and which live profiles are worth opening before you compare the whole stack.

Verified 30d

1

1 in the last 90 days

Top category

Commercial

1 tracked robots

Paired most often with

3d Depth Sensor, Bumper ×3 (base), and Ethernet

AI

Decision brief

What matters before you compare implementations

Where it helps most

  • higher-level planning, adaptation, and interaction quality
  • richer autonomy claims that can change the shortlist materially
  • more flexible task handling when the vendor stack is mature enough

What to validate

  • what runs on-device versus in the cloud
  • how branded AI labels map to real user-facing behavior
  • whether updates and latency tradeoffs fit the intended job

Evidence basis

What this route is grounded in

  • Aggregated from each robot's `specs.ai` field in ui44 data.

Source pack

Official reference links

1

Market snapshot

Use the structure first: which categories lean on NAOqi OS (Linux-based), which manufacturers repeat it, and what usually ships beside it.

Lead category

Commercial

1 tracked robots currently anchor this label.

Most repeated manufacturer

Aldebaran Robotics

1 tracked robots make this the clearest manufacturer-level signal on the route.

Most common adjacent signal

3d Depth Sensor

1 shared robots pair this component with 3d Depth Sensor.

Top categories

# Name Usage
1 Commercial 1 robot

Top manufacturers

# Name Usage
1 Aldebaran Robotics 1 robot

Commonly paired with NAOqi OS (Linux-based)

# Name Shared robots
1 3d Depth Sensor 1 robot
2 Bumper ×3 (base) 1 robot
3 Ethernet 1 robot
4 Gyroscope ×2 (torso + base) 1 robot
5 Laser Sensor ×6 (base) 1 robot
6 Microphone ×4 1 robot

How to read the market

Structure first, prose second.

Category concentration tells you where the component is actually doing work, manufacturer repetition shows whether the signal is market-wide or vendor-specific, and pairings reveal which neighboring technologies usually ship alongside it.

At a glance

Kind AI
Tracked robots 1
Ready now 1
Public prices 0
Official sources 1
Variants normalized 1

Robot directory · NAOqi OS (Linux-based)

The old card wall is replaced with a featured first-click strip and a dense inventory table so the route behaves like a serious directory.

Directory briefing

Featured first, dense sweep second.

Open the clearest profiles first, then sweep the full inventory in a denser table. Featured cards are selected by readiness, image quality, and official source availability, so the first click is usually the most informative one.

Ready now

1

Public price

0

Official links

1

Featured now

1

How to scan this directory

Use the shortest credible path through the roster.

  • Featured cards: start with the strongest documented profiles to understand real implementation quality fast.
  • Inventory table: sweep the whole market once you know which profiles deserve serious comparison.
  • Compare intent: use status, official links, and standout specs before treating the label itself as proof.

Best first clicks

Open these before sweeping the full inventory

These robots score highest on readiness, public detail quality, and image clarity, making them the fastest way to understand how NAOqi OS (Linux-based) shows up in practice.

Pepper by Aldebaran Robotics — Commercial robot
Available Commercial
Aldebaran Robotics Since 2014

Pepper

Aldebaran Robotics' semi-humanoid robot designed to read emotions and interact with people. Introduced by SoftBank in Tokyo in June 2014, Pepper became one of the most recognized social robots in the world — approximately 27,000 units were manufactured before production was paused in June 2021 due to weak demand. The first batch of 1,000 units sold out in 60 seconds in June 2015. Pepper was deployed in SoftBank stores, banks, hospitals, airports, and restaurants across Japan, Europe, and North America. Features a 10.1-inch touch display, emotion recognition via facial expression and voice tone analysis, and a wheeled omnidirectional base. In June 2025, Aldebaran Robotics went into receivership. In July 2025, Shenzhen-based Maxvision Technology Corp. acquired Aldebaran's core assets, including the Pepper and NAO intellectual property.

Public price

Price TBA

Current official sales are…

Battery

~12 hours (shop use)

Charge ~8 hours 20 minutes

Shortlist read

Shipping now; pricing still needs vendor confirmation.

Profile

Full inventory · 1 robots

Compact mobile scan: status, price, standout context, and links stay visible without sideways scrolling.

Quick answers

FAQ

The short version of what this label means in the ui44 catalog, where it matters, and how to compare it without over-reading the marketing copy.

Frequently Asked Questions

How common is NAOqi OS (Linux-based) in the database?

NAOqi OS (Linux-based) currently appears on 1 tracked robots across 1 manufacturers. That makes this route useful for both deep research and fast shortlist scanning, not just one-off editorial reading.

Which robot categories lean on NAOqi OS (Linux-based) the most?

The strongest concentration is in Commercial (1). Category mix is the fastest clue for whether this component behaves like baseline plumbing or a more selective differentiator.

Does NAOqi OS (Linux-based) usually show up on ready-to-buy robots?

1 of the 1 tracked profiles are currently marked Available or Active. That means the label has live market relevance here, but you should still open the profiles with public pricing or official links first before treating it as a clean buyer signal.

What should I compare first on this page?

Start with readiness, official source quality, and the standout spec column in the inventory table. On component routes, those three signals usually remove weak profiles faster than reading every descriptive paragraph.

What usually ships alongside NAOqi OS (Linux-based)?

The strongest shared-stack signals here are 3d Depth Sensor (1), Bumper ×3 (base) (1), and Ethernet (1). Use those pairings to branch into adjacent component pages when one label is too narrow for the decision.

Are there enough public price points to benchmark this component?

0 matching robots currently expose public pricing. That is enough to create directional context, but not enough to treat one price bracket as the whole market. Use the directory to find the transparent profiles first, then widen the sweep.

Which manufacturers are worth opening first?

Start with Aldebaran Robotics (1). Repetition across manufacturers is often the clearest signal that the component is part of a stable market pattern rather than a one-off marketing callout.

Reference library

The original long-form component research is still here, but collapsed so the main route can prioritize hierarchy and scan speed.

Fundamentals

The baseline explanation of what NAOqi OS (Linux-based) is, why it matters, and how to think about it before comparing implementations.

What Is NAOqi OS (Linux-based)?

NAOqi OS (Linux-based) is a ai component found in 1 robot tracked in the ui44 Home Robot Database. As a ai technology, NAOqi OS (Linux-based) plays a specific role in enabling robot perception, interaction, or operation depending on its implementation in each platform.

At a Glance

Component Type

AI

Used By

1 robot

Manufacturer

Aldebaran Robotics

Category

Commercial

Available Now

1 robot

The AI platform is the cognitive engine of a robot. It encompasses the machine learning models, decision-making algorithms, and processing infrastructure that enable a robot to interpret sensor data, plan actions, and interact naturally with humans.

Key Points

  • Ranges from simple rule-based systems to sophisticated deep learning
  • Enables learning from experience and adapting to environments
  • Increasingly integrates large language models for natural interaction

In the ui44 database, NAOqi OS (Linux-based) is categorized under AI components. For a comprehensive explanation of all component types, consult the components glossary.

Why NAOqi OS (Linux-based) Matters in Robotics

The AI platform fundamentally determines a robot's intelligence, adaptability, and user experience. The AI stack also affects responsiveness, privacy, and the robot's ability to receive meaningful software updates.

Advanced AI handles unexpected situations and improves over time

Enables natural language understanding for voice commands

On-device vs. cloud processing affects both privacy and capability

NAOqi OS (Linux-based) Adoption

Used in 1 robot across 1 categoryCommercial, indicating specialized use across the robotics industry.

How NAOqi OS (Linux-based) Works

Robot AI systems typically combine several layers that work together to transform raw data into intelligent behavior. Modern robots increasingly use neural networks with some processing on-device and some in the cloud.

1

Perception AI

Converts raw sensor data into understanding — recognizing objects, faces, and spaces

2

Planning AI

Decides what actions to take based on current understanding and goals

3

Control AI

Executes planned movements with precision, managing motors and actuators

4

Interaction AI

Understands and generates human communication — voice, gestures, text

NAOqi OS (Linux-based) Integration

Implementation varies by robot platform and manufacturer. Each robot integrates NAOqi OS (Linux-based) differently depending on system architecture, use case, and target tasks. Integration with other onboard AI subsystems and the main processing unit determines real-world performance.

Technical notes and use cases

Deeper technical framing, matched technology profiles, and the longer use-case treatment for NAOqi OS (Linux-based).

NAOqi OS (Linux-based): Technical Deep Dive

Beyond the high-level overview, understanding the technical foundations of ai technologies like NAOqi OS (Linux-based) helps buyers and researchers evaluate implementations more critically.

Engineering Principles

Robot AI systems are built on layers of computational models, each handling different aspects of intelligence.

  • Signal processing algorithms clean and normalize raw sensor data
  • Feature extraction identifies patterns — edges in images, phonemes in speech, spatial structures
  • ML models (CNNs for vision, transformers for language, RL for decisions) produce understanding
  • Architecture: perception pipeline → world model → planning system → execution controller

Performance Characteristics

AI performance trade-offs — the accuracy-latency-energy triangle — fundamentally shape design decisions.

Inference speed Processing time — critical for real-time navigation
Accuracy How often the AI makes correct decisions
Generalization Performance in new, unseen environments beyond training data
Robustness Resilience to noisy inputs and edge cases
Energy efficiency Large neural networks consume significant compute power

Technological Evolution

The AI landscape in robotics has undergone several paradigm shifts.

Classical robotics: hand-crafted rules and explicit programming

Machine learning era: data-driven approaches — learning from examples

Deep learning: end-to-end systems learning directly from raw sensor data

Foundation models & LLMs: broad world knowledge and natural language understanding

Current frontier: embodied AI — models that understand physics and spatial reasoning

Known Limitations

Current robot AI has significant limitations that buyers should understand.

  • Most AI is narrow — excels at specific tasks but cannot transfer skills broadly
  • Distribution shift: models fail unpredictably on inputs different from training data
  • Cloud processing introduces latency and privacy concerns
  • On-device AI lags state-of-the-art by years due to power and cost constraints
  • Ethical concerns around data collection, bias, and autonomous decision-making persist

Use Cases & Applications for NAOqi OS (Linux-based)

Key application domains for ai technologies like NAOqi OS (Linux-based).

Autonomous Decision-Making

AI enables robots to make decisions in real time without human input. Whether it's choosing the optimal cleaning path, deciding when to return to the charging dock, or determining how to respond to an unexpected obstacle, the AI platform processes sensor data and selects the best course of action from its learned repertoire.

Natural Language Understanding

Modern AI platforms, especially those leveraging large language models, allow robots to understand and respond to conversational commands. This goes beyond simple keyword recognition — advanced AI can handle ambiguous requests, follow multi-step instructions, and maintain context across a conversation.

Adaptive Learning

Some AI platforms allow robots to improve their performance over time by learning from experience. A robot might learn the most efficient cleaning route for your specific home, adapt to your daily routines, or improve its object recognition based on items it encounters repeatedly.

Predictive Maintenance

AI can monitor the robot's own systems, predicting when components might fail or need maintenance. By analyzing patterns in motor performance, battery degradation, and sensor accuracy, AI-equipped robots can alert users to potential issues before they cause problems.

Task Planning & Scheduling

AI platforms enable sophisticated task planning — breaking complex goals into executable steps, scheduling activities around user preferences, and re-planning when circumstances change. This capability is essential for robots that handle multiple responsibilities or operate on complex schedules.

10 Capabilities Across 1 robot

Emotion Recognition Facial Expression Analysis Natural Conversation 20 Degrees of Freedom 10.1-inch Touch Display Omnidirectional Wheeled Base Autonomous Navigation Retail & Reception Use Education & Research Platform Elder Care Assistance

Visit each robot's detail page to see which capabilities are available on specific models.

Market breakdown and adjacent routes

Manufacturer mix, specs context, price context, category overlap, and adjacent components worth branching into next.

NAOqi OS (Linux-based) Across Robot Categories

NAOqi OS (Linux-based) spans 1 robot category — from consumer to research platforms.

Technologies most often paired with NAOqi OS (Linux-based) across 1 robot.

Browse the full components directory or see the components glossary for detailed explanations of each technology.

Alternatives to NAOqi OS (Linux-based)

203 other ai technologies tracked in ui44, ranked by adoption.

Browse all AI components or use the robot comparison tool to evaluate how different ai configurations perform across specific robot models.

NAOqi OS (Linux-based) in the Broader Robotics Industry

The AI landscape in robotics is undergoing a transformation driven by advances in large language models, multimodal AI, and embodied intelligence research.

Key Industry Trends

Foundation models for robotics

Purpose-built models that understand physics, spatial reasoning, and manipulation — enabling generalization to new tasks

On-device vs. cloud debate

Privacy-conscious buyers prefer local processing; cloud-connected robots benefit from more powerful, frequently updated models

Open-source frameworks

ROS 2 and PyTorch for robotics are lowering barriers, enabling more manufacturers to develop capable AI platforms

Industry Adoption Snapshot

NAOqi OS (Linux-based) is adopted by 1 robot from 1 manufacturer in the ui44 database, providing a data-driven view of real-world deployment patterns.

Integration & Ecosystem Compatibility

Platform compatibility, voice integration, and AI capabilities across robots with NAOqi OS (Linux-based).

Platform Compatibility

NAOqi SDKChoregrapheAndroid SDK

AI Platforms

Buyer and operations guidance

The long-form buyer, maintenance, and troubleshooting material kept available without forcing it into the main scan path.

Buyer Considerations for NAOqi OS (Linux-based)

If NAOqi OS (Linux-based) is an important factor in your robot selection, here are key considerations to guide your decision.

What to Look For in AI Components

On-device vs. cloud

On-device AI works without internet but may be less powerful

Learning capability

Can the robot improve and adapt to your specific home over time?

Natural language

How well does it understand conversational voice commands?

Update frequency

Does the manufacturer regularly ship AI improvements?

Privacy

What data is sent to the cloud, and how is it protected?

Available Now: 1 of 1 Robots

How to Evaluate NAOqi OS (Linux-based)

Integration Quality

A component is only as good as its integration. Check how the manufacturer has incorporated NAOqi OS (Linux-based) into the overall robot design and software stack.

Complementary Components

Review what other ai technologies are paired with NAOqi OS (Linux-based) in each robot — see the related components section.

Category Fit

Make sure the robot's category matches your use case. NAOqi OS (Linux-based) serves different roles in different robot types.

Manufacturer Track Record

Consider the manufacturer's reputation for software updates, support, and component reliability.

Compare Before You Buy

Use the ui44 comparison tool to evaluate robots with NAOqi OS (Linux-based) side by side.

Maintenance & Longevity: NAOqi OS (Linux-based)

Overview

AI components present a unique maintenance profile because much of their capability is defined by software rather than hardware. This means AI performance can improve through updates but is also vulnerable to degradation if cloud services are discontinued or software support ends. Understanding the AI maintenance model is critical for assessing a robot's long-term value proposition.

Durability & Reliability

The hardware that runs AI workloads — processors, memory, and neural network accelerators — is highly durable solid-state electronics. Physical failure of AI processing hardware is rare under normal operating conditions.

  • However, computational hardware has a de facto obsolescence curve: as AI models grow larger and more capable, the processing power needed to run state-of-the-art models increases.
  • A robot's AI hardware may not be able to run future advanced models, effectively creating a capability ceiling even though the hardware still functions.
  • This is particularly relevant for robots that rely on on-device AI processing.
Ongoing Maintenance

AI maintenance primarily involves keeping the robot's software stack updated. Firmware updates often include improved AI models, bug fixes for edge cases in perception or navigation, and new capabilities unlocked by algorithmic improvements.

  • For cloud-connected AI systems, maintenance happens transparently on the server side.
  • On-device AI systems require explicit firmware updates that should be applied promptly.
  • Users should also periodically verify that the robot's AI is performing as expected — if navigation accuracy degrades or voice recognition becomes less reliable over time, a firmware update or factory recalibration may be needed.
Future-Proofing Considerations

AI future-proofing depends heavily on the manufacturer's ongoing investment in software development and the robot's computational headroom. Robots designed with more processing power than initially needed have room to run improved AI models in future updates.

  • Manufacturers that actively develop their AI platform — shipping regular updates with measurable improvements — provide much better long-term value than those that ship a final product with no further development.
  • Open-source AI frameworks (like those built on ROS 2) can also extend a robot's useful life by enabling community-developed improvements beyond the manufacturer's official support period.

For the 1 robot in the ui44 database using NAOqi OS (Linux-based), we recommend checking the individual robot pages for manufacturer-specific maintenance guidance and support documentation. Each manufacturer has different support policies, update frequencies, and warranty terms that affect the long-term ownership experience of their ai technologies.

Troubleshooting & Common Issues: NAOqi OS (Linux-based)

AI-related issues in robots often manifest as degraded performance rather than complete failures. The robot may navigate less efficiently, misrecognize objects, respond slowly to commands, or make decisions that seem illogical. Diagnosing AI issues requires understanding whether the problem is in the AI software, the input data feeding the AI, or the processing hardware running the AI models.

Robot navigation becomes less efficient over time

Likely Causes

  • Accumulated mapping errors, outdated models that have not adapted to furniture changes, or degraded sensor data feeding the navigation AI can all reduce path planning quality.
  • Memory limitations on the robot's processor may cause older map data to be pruned, losing previously learned optimizations.

Resolution

  • Rebuild the robot's map to give the navigation AI fresh, accurate data.
  • Check for firmware updates that include navigation model improvements.
  • Ensure all sensors feeding the navigation system are clean and functioning correctly, as AI performance is only as good as its input data.
  • Some robots have a 'learning mode' that can be triggered to reoptimize routes.

Voice commands are misunderstood more often than before

Likely Causes

  • Changes in the cloud-based AI model (updated by the platform provider) can sometimes alter recognition patterns.
  • Microphone degradation due to dust accumulation reduces audio quality.
  • Environmental changes like new background noise sources or acoustic modifications to the room can affect speech recognition accuracy.

Resolution

  • Clean the robot's microphone ports gently with compressed air.
  • Retrain voice profiles if the manufacturer supports speaker adaptation.
  • Check whether the voice AI provider has reported known issues or changes.
  • If using a cloud-based voice assistant, verify that the robot's internet connection is stable and low-latency.

Object recognition fails for previously identified items

Likely Causes

  • Camera sensor degradation, changed lighting conditions, or AI model updates that inadvertently alter recognition behavior can cause regression.
  • Objects may also be presented in orientations or contexts that differ from the training data.

Resolution

  • Clean camera lenses and ensure adequate lighting in problem areas.
  • Check for firmware updates that address recognition accuracy.
  • If the robot supports custom object training, retrain problem objects.
  • Report persistent recognition failures to the manufacturer as they may indicate a model regression worth investigating.

When to Contact the Manufacturer

  • Contact the manufacturer if the robot shows sudden, significant performance drops after a firmware update, if AI processing appears to freeze or crash during operation, or if the robot makes safety-relevant errors like failing to detect obstacles or cliff edges.
  • AI issues that affect safety should be reported immediately and the robot should be taken out of service until resolved.

For model-specific troubleshooting, visit the individual robot pages for the 1 robot using NAOqi OS (Linux-based). Each manufacturer provides model-specific support resources and diagnostic tools for their ai implementations.