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Search is the fastest route on ui44 for high-volume scanning: robot names, manufacturers, categories, capabilities, sensors, connectivity, and AI stacks all surface in one workspace that stays usable on mobile, laptop, and 4K.

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170 results for "humanoid"

Match labels show why each robot surfaced for this query. The result deck stays dense enough to scan fast while keeping individual entries distinct and readable.

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Astribot T1

Astribot T1

Astribot T1 is a lower-cost wheeled humanoid from Shenzhen-based Astribot / Stardust Intelligence, announced in late May 2026 as a compact follow-on to the S1 platform. Official launch materials present T1 as a cable-driven, customizable AI-computing platform for real-world deployment. Independent coverage reports a 155 cm, 66 kg robot with 23 degrees of freedom excluding end effectors, 5 kg single-arm payload, and support for grippers or five-finger hands. Astribot positions T1 for practical manipulation work across home, commercial, research, and industrial settings, including cooking demos, laundry folding, laboratory work, parts sorting, and EV-charging tasks. Detailed battery, sensor, autonomy, and delivery specifications remain undisclosed.

Category Description Capability

Price

¥89,900

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NEX
Humanoid | Axonex Intelligence

NEX

NEX is Axonex Intelligence's production-oriented semi-humanoid service robot for workplace automation. Axonex's official Productivity Series page describes NEX as a wheeled service robot with dexterous hands, AI vision, conversational AI, autonomous navigation, 26 degrees of freedom, and a 2-meter workspace for shelves, counters, and equipment. Mint's InnoEX 2026 launch release says NEX debuted in Hong Kong on April 14, 2026, uses an NVIDIA Jetson AGX Orin with Axonex's AX-CORE database, recognizes more than 100 scenes, objects, and actions, and coordinates its wheeled chassis, torso, arms, and hands for grasping tasks in medical-care, industrial, retail, and exhibition environments.

Category Description Capability

Price

No public price has been announced; Axonex promotes demos and contact-sales discussions for the Productivity Series, and commercial availability details are not officially disclosed.

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Apollo 2
Humanoid | Apptronik

Apollo 2

Apollo 2 is Apptronik's current-generation humanoid platform, unveiled with its expanded Robot Park data-collection facility in Austin. The platform is offered in both bipedal and wheeled-base configurations so Apptronik can train and deploy the same core humanoid technology across logistics, manufacturing, retail, and other real-world work environments. Official materials describe Apollo 2 as the Robot Park workhorse for more than a year, with fleets already operating at Apptronik facilities and customer or partner sites, while data from teleoperation and autonomous execution supports Apptronik's Google DeepMind collaboration on Gemini Robotics models and the future Apollo 3 commercial fleet.

Category Description Capability

Price

No public pricing or general commercial sale terms announced; Apollo 2 is active in Apptronik Robot Park and customer/partner data-collection deployments.

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DR02
Humanoid | DEEPRobotics

DR02

DR02 is DEEPRobotics' industrial full-size humanoid built for outdoor and harsh-environment deployment. The company describes it as the world's first humanoid with full-body IP66 dust and water protection, designed to operate across rain, humidity, dust, cold storage, and high-temperature workshop conditions from -20°C to 55°C. DEEPRobotics says the robot can move through human workspaces, traverse basic complex terrain, carry out practical tasks such as cargo transport and emergency equipment delivery, and use modular quick-detach arms and legs to reduce maintenance downtime. Launch coverage reports a 1.75 m frame, 1.5 m/s walking speed, 4 m/s top speed, LiDAR/depth/wide-angle sensing, and a 275 TOPS compute unit, but DEEPRobotics has not published public pricing or a consumer availability channel.

Category Description Capability

Price

Commercial industrial humanoid; DEEPRobotics has not published public MSRP or standard purchase availability.

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Cinnamon Mini
Humanoid | Donut Robotics

Cinnamon Mini

Cinnamon Mini is a compact humanoid that Donut Robotics first unveiled at SusHi Tech Tokyo 2026 as the smaller counterpart to its 170cm Cinnamon 1. Official materials describe the 130cm robot as a lighter, more mobile, lower-cost model focused on reception, guidance, events, staging, dance, and entertainment work rather than factory or construction labor replacement. Donut says Cinnamon Mini uses video-based motion learning instead of conventional motion-capture workflows, but pricing, weight, runtime, payload, sensors, and purchase timing have not been officially disclosed.

Category Description Capability

Price

Donut Robotics describes Cinnamon Mini as a lower-cost model but has not published pricing, preorder, or sales-channel details as of 2026-05-23.

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R1 Pro
Humanoid | Galaxea Dynamics

R1 Pro

Galaxea R1 Pro is a 170 cm wheeled dual-arm humanoid/mobile manipulator for robotics labs, embodied-AI development, and industrial R&D rather than uncertified general home use. Galaxea's official store lists the 2026 model as in stock at $69,999, with dual 7-DOF Galaxea A2 arms, G1 force-controlled parallel grippers, a 4-DOF torso, a 6-DOF omnidirectional chassis, NVIDIA Jetson AGX Orin 32GB compute, multi-camera/LiDAR sensing, and VR teleoperation support. Official hardware docs list 96 kg with battery while the current store parameter table lists 126 kg including battery, so buyer weight should be verified before procurement.

Category Description Capability

Price

$69,999

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Humanoid | Galbot

S1

Galbot S1 is a heavy-duty wheeled humanoid robot for industrial and logistics material handling, positioned above the company's G1 service robot. Galbot's official product page highlights up to 50 kg payload handling, a 0-2.3 m operating range, autonomous path planning, dual-arm collaboration, disturbance-resistant embodied-AI control, an 8-hour runtime, and autonomous hot-swappable batteries for continuous operation. The official specification table lists 1793 mm maximum height, 320 kg weight, NVIDIA AGX Orin 64GB / 275 TOPS compute, 4-wheel omnidirectional mobility, and 1.5 m/s maximum speed. Independent coverage from Rocking Robots reports a January 2026 introduction, CATL production-line deployment for heavy-load handling, and Galbot collaborations with Bosch Group, Toyota, BAIC Group, SAIC Group, and Zeekr; iF Design's 2026 award profile corroborates the S1 identity, heavy-duty industrial target, 50 kg payload claim, 8-hour runtime, omnidirectional steerable wheels, swappable battery system, and trade/industry target market, while listing a 2027 launch date.

Category Description Capability

Price

Galbot does not disclose public pricing for S1; third-party estimates and marketplace listings are not used as official MSRP.

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GENE.01 / GENE.01-W
Humanoid | Generative Bionics

GENE.01 / GENE.01-W

GENE.01 is Generative Bionics' prototype humanoid Physical AI platform, presented at CES 2026 and later moved toward industrial pre-series development through an Italdesign exterior-design industrialization partnership. The platform centers on a full-size humanoid body with distributed tactile sensing and artificial skin so the robot can use contact feedback as part of its control loop. The related GENE.01-W welding variant is being developed with Fincantieri for shipyard welding support, with official plans for initial on-site tests at the Sestri Ponente shipyard by the end of 2026. Public sources describe the program as industrial validation rather than a consumer or developer product; official dimensions, battery, payload, and pricing remain undisclosed.

Category Description Capability

Price

Generative Bionics has not published public pricing. Humanoid.Guide lists a $50,000 estimate but marks its profile not verified, so ui44 does not treat that as official pricing.

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GenP
Humanoid | GenON

GenP

GenP is GenON's senior-care Physical AI humanoid, developed with KB Financial Group for care-facility scenarios rather than announced consumer sale. GenON's official AI EXPO KOREA 2026 materials say GenP was first shown publicly in May 2026 and demonstrated recognizing a pill bottle, controlling finger joints precisely, grasping the bottle with suitable force and orientation, checking a senior's condition, and holding simple care-oriented conversations. GenON's current Physical AI page frames GenP as a care-facility solution with staged capabilities from companionship and medication reminders through delivery, wheelchair or door assistance, and direct posture-support care. Korean business and technology coverage independently reported the live AI EXPO demo, KB's role, medication recognition and delivery scenarios, rehabilitation guidance, and the fact that field deployment was still future-facing rather than live operation.

Category Description Capability

Price

No public price or sales channel has been announced; GenON and KB Financial Group have presented GenP as a senior-care Physical AI demonstration and staged care-facility commercialization effort.

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Gino 1
Humanoid | Geekplus

Gino 1

Gino 1 is Geekplus' warehouse-native humanoid/mobile manipulator for logistics operations. Geekplus describes it as a recently launched general-purpose humanoid powered by Geekplus Brain, purpose-built for warehouse work including picking, packing, box handling, and inspection. Independent warehouse-robotics coverage reports a dual-arm wheeled platform with force-controlled 7-DoF arms, three-finger grippers, tactile sensing, palm RGB-D cameras, an omnidirectional mobile chassis, and wireless charging. Public height, weight, runtime, payload, speed, and commercial deployment terms have not been fully disclosed.

Category Description Capability

Price

Geekplus has not published public pricing or standard purchase terms for Gino 1; availability appears to be enterprise-led through Geekplus warehouse automation channels.

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Maker H01
Humanoid | GigaAI

Maker H01

GigaAI Maker H01 is a wheeled dual-arm humanoid platform positioned as an AI-native physical body for service and home scenarios. GigaAI's official product page describes a full-stack self-developed embodied robot with dual arms and a mobile base, flexible-object manipulation, long-horizon task planning, and the ability to break vague instructions into many continuous atomic actions. The same official page frames Maker H01 for household assistance, broader service work, industrial tasks, research, training-data collection, pick-and-place, inspection, reception, lab assistance, meal-preparation workflows, shelf organization, and goods handling. Humanoid.Guide corroborates the Maker H01 identity as a wheeled GigaAI humanoid prototype and reports dual 7-DOF arms, 28 total degrees of freedom, 160 cm height, 64 kg weight, 4-hour runtime, 8 km/h maximum speed, and home/service/light-logistics target markets. Separate May 2026 coverage uses the SeeLight S1 name for a GigaAI home-butler pilot; public sources do not yet establish whether that is the same platform name or a sibling, so this entry avoids applying SeeLight S1 pricing or rollout details to Maker H01.

Category Description Sensor

Price

Official Maker H01 pricing has not been disclosed. Humanoid.Guide lists the robot as a prototype and not available for purchase; separate SeeLight S1 pilot coverage reports different future pricing for a possibly related GigaAI home robot, so that figure is not applied to Maker H01.

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HMND 01 Alpha Wheeled
Commercial | Humanoid

HMND 01 Alpha Wheeled

Humanoid's HMND 01 Alpha Wheeled is a dual-arm industrial humanoid mobile manipulator built for warehouse, logistics, and manufacturing workflows rather than home use. Official product materials present it as the company's first commercial-scale Alpha platform, combining a 29-DoF upper body, interchangeable dexterous hands or grippers, and an omnidirectional wheeled base for stable work on factory floors. Humanoid launched the robot in September 2025, then announced a live March 2026 proof of concept with SAP and Martur Fompak in which Alpha Wheeled received warehouse tasks from SAP's AI layer, autonomously navigated to pallets, picked KLT boxes, and delivered them into a production logistics flow. The company positions the robot as an early industrial deployment platform that will inform later Beta hardware, with KinetIQ orchestration designed to let fleets plug into existing enterprise systems.

Maker Description AI

Price

No public pricing; Humanoid has positioned Alpha Wheeled around enterprise pilots, early access, and RaaS-style deployment rather than retail sales

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Next step after "humanoid"

Turn 170 search results into an actual decision.

Once the deck stops feeling noisy, stop typing and change tools: compare finalists side by side, widen into a category map, or sanity-check the manufacturer context before committing to the shortlist.

Open compare

Reading the result deck

Stop searching once the shortlist starts to repeat.

170 results is usually enough to expose the right cluster. The next lift should come from structured comparison, not from typing more words into the same field.

1. Trim

Drop the obvious mismatches by maker, price, or category.

2. Open

Open the best 2-4 robots in parallel for deeper spec context.

3. Compare

Use compare once the decision is a tradeoff, not discovery.

Need a broader view?

Switch tools when the question changes.

Search wins when you know the signal. Directory routes win when you need a map of the entire field. Use both deliberately instead of forcing one tool to do both jobs badly.

Search playbook

The search indexes every attribute of 409 robots — names, manufacturers, categories, capabilities, sensors, connectivity, and AI stacks. Here is how to get the best results.

Query examples

The search indexes every attribute of all 409 robots — names, manufacturers, categories, capabilities, sensors, connectivity, and AI stacks.

Search query examples
Search for Example Finds
Robot nameOptimusTesla Optimus and similar names
ManufacturerUnitreeAll Unitree Robotics robots
CategoryhumanoidHumanoid category robots
Capabilityvoice interactionRobots with voice interaction
SensorLiDARRobots with LiDAR sensors
ProtocolMatterRobots supporting Matter

Price Sorting

No price filter in search? Sort results on the all robots page by price low-to-high or high-to-low.
1

Priority matching

Name matches rank highest, then manufacturer, then categories, sensors, and capabilities.

2

Cross-field matching

Multi-word queries match across fields — "Boston Dynamics quadruped" hits maker + category simultaneously.

3

Live refresh

Results update as you type with sub-second response — start broad, add specificity, watch the deck narrow.

4

Research workflow

Search → open 2–4 promising robots → compare finalists → check maker context.

Research strategies

The right search approach depends on your role and what decision you need to make. These strategies cover the most common research patterns.

Research strategies by role

Whether you are a consumer researching your first robot purchase, a journalist covering the robotics industry, an engineer evaluating competitive products, or an investor assessing market opportunities — the right search strategy depends on what signal you are tracking and what decision you need to make next.

First-time buyer

Start broad: try "cleaning robot" or "companion robot" for an overview of what is available. Review prices and features across multiple results, then narrow with specific terms like sensor types or brand names. The categories page has buyer guides with price ranges for each robot type to help set expectations.

Upgrading a robot

Search for features you wish your current robot had — "LiDAR navigation," "auto-empty," "voice control," or "obstacle avoidance." Compare your current model against candidates using the comparison tool to evaluate whether the upgrade justifies the cost. Pay attention to connectivity protocol changes — newer robots may use Matter instead of proprietary apps.

Tech enthusiast

Search cutting-edge terms: "bipedal locomotion," "force torque sensor," "large language model," or "ROS 2." Combine with status filters on the all robots page to distinguish currently available products from development-stage prototypes and pre-order models. The components directory provides deeper technical context on unfamiliar sensors and AI platforms.

Commercial buyer

Search deployment scenarios: "warehouse automation," "logistics," "reception desk," or "security patrol." Check manufacturer profiles for enterprise support options, fleet management capabilities, and commercial pricing arrangements for bulk deployments. Regional context matters — the countries directory shows production hubs and import considerations.

Research by technology

Search for component names like "LiDAR," "NVIDIA Jetson," "ROS 2," or "Matter" to find robots built on specific platforms. See the components directory for structured technology views and component trends for adoption momentum data over the past 30 days.

Research by use case

Search for the task rather than the product: "mopping," "lawn mowing," "security patrol," or "elderly care" surfaces robots designed for those applications. Cross-category queries like "security" can reveal surprising alternatives — dedicated security robots, companion robots with surveillance features, and quadrupeds with patrol capabilities all appear in one search.

Research by region

Search "Japan," "Chinese," or "European" to find robots from specific markets. The countries directory offers a structured geographic view with production hubs, manufacturer density, and regional market leaders for deeper comparison.

Complete research workflow

1

Explore categories

Understand the robotics landscape and identify which robot type matches your need.

2

Search candidates

Build a list of 3–5 promising results by name, capability, or sensor type.

3

Deep-dive profiles

Review full specifications, sensor breakdowns, and capability analysis on each candidate.

4

Compare finalists

Put top picks side by side with the comparison tool to highlight tradeoffs.

5

Research maker

Evaluate the company track record, portfolio breadth, and support infrastructure.

6

Check technology

Use the components directory to understand unfamiliar sensors, AI platforms, and connectivity protocols.

When to use search vs other tools

When to use search versus browse
Use search when Use browse when
You know the robot name, maker, or a specific technology keywordYou need to understand the full market landscape first
You want fast results across the entire database in one queryYou want buyer guides with price ranges and recommendations
You are validating whether a specific sensor or protocol existsYou want to compare regional markets or manufacturer portfolios
You need shareable, bookmarkable result URLs for laterYou want structured side-by-side specification comparison

Cross-category discovery

One of the most valuable but underused search strategies is cross-category exploration. Searching across categories can reveal surprising alternatives you might not have considered:

  • Security needs? Searching "security" surfaces dedicated security robots, companion robots with surveillance features, quadrupeds with patrol capabilities, and cleaning robots with built-in cameras.
  • Specific sensor? Searching "camera" shows robots from every category that include cameras — from vacuums to humanoids to security bots — revealing technology adoption patterns across the market.
  • Budget comparison? Searching a price range or budget term can surface robots across categories that compete for the same spending decision, even if they serve different purposes.

Saving and sharing research

Bookmarkable URLs

Every search generates a permanent URL. Bookmark it, share it with colleagues, or paste it into a team chat — the same URL always shows the latest data for that query.

Multi-device research

Start on your laptop, continue on your phone. Search URLs work everywhere. Open candidate detail pages in parallel tabs for efficient comparison across devices.

Compare integration

Once your shortlist is small enough, move directly to the comparison tool for structured spec-by-spec analysis. The compare page also supports shareable URLs for team purchase decisions.

Search help

The practical questions people hit most often once they start narrowing the shortlist.

Frequently Asked Questions

What can I search for on ui44?
You can search across all 409 robots by name, manufacturer, category, capability, sensor type, connectivity option, or any keyword that appears in a robot's profile. The search indexes every attribute in the database for comprehensive results.
Why am I getting no results?
If your search returns no results, try simplifying your query. Use single keywords rather than phrases, check for typos, and try synonyms (e.g., "vacuum" instead of "cleaning robot"). You can also browse by category or manufacturer.
Can I filter search results by price?
The search page does not include a numerical price filter, but you can use the all robots page which offers category, manufacturer, and price sorting together.
Do search results update in real time?
Yes, results update as you type with a short debounce delay to balance responsiveness with efficiency. There is no need to press Enter or click a search button — just start typing and results appear automatically. You can also press Enter or click Search for an immediate update. The result cards are rendered server-side and delivered via HTMX partial updates, meaning only the search results section refreshes without disturbing the rest of the page.
How is search relevance determined?
Results are ranked by match quality across multiple data dimensions. The relevance algorithm prioritizes exact matches in high-importance fields — a robot name match ranks higher than a description mention, which ranks higher than a sensor or capability match. Multi-word queries are evaluated as a combined search, matching across any combination of fields. For example, searching "Boston Dynamics quadruped" surfaces robots from Boston Dynamics in the quadruped category.
Can I search by technical specifications?
Yes — search for specific sensor names, connectivity protocols, AI platforms, or capability keywords. For example, searching for "LiDAR" returns all robots that include LiDAR sensors, while "Matter" surfaces robots supporting the Matter smart home protocol. For structured technical browsing, the components directory provides dedicated pages for each technology with complete robot compatibility lists and detailed technical explanations.
Does search include robots not yet available for purchase?
Yes, the search indexes every robot in the database regardless of availability status. Results include robots that are Available, in Pre-order, in Development, and in Prototype stages. Each result card displays the robot's current status so you can quickly identify which results represent products you can buy today versus those still in development. To limit results to only purchasable robots, use the status filter tabs on the all robots page.
How often is the search data updated?
The search index is rebuilt whenever the database is updated, ensuring that new robots, updated specifications, and changed prices are immediately searchable without delay. Each robot detail page shows a "last verified" date so you can assess data freshness for any specific result. Available products are prioritized for frequent verification, ensuring that purchase-ready robots have the most current information.
Can I share or bookmark my search results?
Yes, every search query generates a shareable URL that preserves your exact search terms and results. You can bookmark searches to revisit later, share specific search results with colleagues evaluating robots together, or save a set of search URLs as a lightweight research project. The URL-based approach ensures your research is reproducible — the same URL always shows the latest data.
What is the best way to narrow down search results?
Start with a broad term and progressively add specificity. For example, typing "robot" shows everything, adding "cleaning" narrows to cleaning robots, and adding a manufacturer name further refines to that company's products. You can also combine search with other tools — identify candidates through search, then use the comparison tool to evaluate your shortlist side by side across all specification dimensions.
Should I use search or browse to find robots?
Use search when you have a specific keyword, name, manufacturer, or technology in mind — it is the fastest way to surface candidates from the entire database in one action. Use browse routes when you need market context: the categories page for understanding robot types and buyer guides, the manufacturers page for company-level research, and the comparison tool for final tradeoff analysis. Most effective research workflows use both: search to discover, browse to contextualize.
Can I search by price range?
Direct price-range filtering is not available in search. However, you can search by category (e.g., "cleaning robot") to see the full price spread, then sort by price on the all robots page for structured price browsing. Many category pages also include price distribution tables showing typical price ranges for budget, mid-range, and premium segments within that robot type.
How do I compare robots after searching?
Once your search results narrow to a manageable shortlist, open the most promising 2–4 robots in separate tabs and review their full detail pages. Then use the comparison tool to place up to 4 robots side by side across every specification dimension — price, sensors, capabilities, connectivity, battery life, dimensions, and AI stack. The comparison view highlights differences that are hard to spot across separate detail pages.
Does search work on mobile?
Yes, search is fully responsive and works on mobile, tablet, and desktop. On smaller screens, the search input is prominently placed at the top of the page, result cards stack vertically for easy scrolling, and all quick-start tags and category chips remain tappable. Every search generates a bookmarkable URL, so you can start research on your phone and continue on your laptop without losing context.
How do I find robots from a specific country?
You can search by country name or nationality — "Japan," "Chinese," "Korean," or "German" will surface robots from manufacturers based in those regions. For a structured geographic view, the countries directory provides dedicated pages for each manufacturing hub, including manufacturer counts, product portfolios, and regional market positioning. Country pages also show production trends and highlight leading manufacturers in each region.
Can I search by robot status (available, pre-order, development)?
The search indexes status labels, so searching for "available," "pre-order," "development," or "prototype" will surface robots matching that status. However, for more structured status filtering, use the status filter tabs on the all robots page, which lets you toggle between Available, Pre-order, Development, and Prototype robots while maintaining category and manufacturer filters. Status information on each robot profile includes a last verified date so you can assess how current the availability data is.
What data does each search result card show?
Each result card displays the robot name, manufacturer (linked to the manufacturer profile), category, a short description, the price (or price note if TBD), and match labels showing which fields matched your query (Name, Maker, Category, Capability, Sensor, or AI). Clicking any result opens the full robot detail page with complete specifications, sensor breakdowns, capability analysis, component details, and manufacturer context.
How do I research a specific technology like LiDAR or Matter?
Search for the technology name directly — "LiDAR," "Matter," "ROS 2," "NVIDIA Jetson," or "Bluetooth 5.0" will return all robots that include that technology. For deeper technical context, the components directory provides dedicated pages for each technology with explanations, adoption statistics, and complete robot compatibility lists. You can also check component trends to see which technologies are gaining or losing adoption across the market over the past 30 days.
What is the difference between search and the all robots page?
The search page is optimized for keyword-based discovery across the entire database — type any term and get instant results from all robots. It indexes every attribute including names, manufacturers, categories, capabilities, sensors, connectivity protocols, and AI platforms. The all robots page is a structured directory with sortable columns, category filters, manufacturer filters, status tabs, and price sorting. Use search when you have a keyword in mind; use the robots page when you want to browse, filter, and sort a structured table view. Both routes link to the same robot detail pages for deep specification analysis.

Keep the research moving

Need a different lens than raw keyword search?

Search is the fastest way to surface candidates. Once the problem becomes breadth, tradeoffs, or manufacturer context, switch tools on purpose instead of endlessly refining one query.