The last few weeks have been pretty eventful in the food robotics space. Here’s our latest food robot roundup to catch you up on some of the most interesting stories.
Strio.AI Says Goodbye to Agtech With Zoox Acquihire
Strio.AI, a Boston-based robotics company founded by MIT alumnus in 2020, was acquired by Zoox, the robotaxi firm owned by Amazon. Strio.AI automates the picking and pruning strawberry crops and has been tested on farms in California and Florida.
Automating fruit picking is challenging, which is why Strio.AI’s fast pace of testing is impressive. However, Zoox is looking to utilize Strio.AI’s expertise to bulk up its computer vision team, which means the Strio.AI team will be winding down its agtech business. The Strio team will lead Zoox’s Perception product, the computer vision software that drives Zoox’s automation.
The Strio.AI deal is just the latest in a string of agtech automation acquisitions. Last month, strawberry-picking robot Traptic was acquired by Bowery, a New York based vertical farm, and pivoted from outdoor to indoor farming. Traptic was founded in 2016 and claims to pick 100,000 strawberries a day, preserving the fruit by pulling by the stem and not touching the strawberry directly. The technology will be adapted and integrated into Bowery’s existing hardware and software since the original tractor-like system isn’t conducive in a vertical farming environment. In April 2021, Root.ai, a company with a machine that picks grape tomatoes with a three-pronged robotic gripper, was acquired by AppHarvest, the operator of the largest greenhouse in the U.S. and now uses four- and eight-fingered grippers to pick strawberries and cucumbers. Since acquisition, picking rates have doubled and the next step is to reduce the costs of the robot.
NVIDIA Invests in Serve Robotics
NVIDIA is investing $10 million in Serve Robotics to expand its sidewalk robot delivery service outside of Los Angeles and San Francisco. While NVIDIA is a new investor in the robotic delivery space, the two companies are familiar with one another as Serve utilizes NVIDIA’s synthetic data generation tools for training and testing Serve’s models in simulations as well as robotic fleet management.
Serve is a fully automated and fully self-driving last-mile delivery service and the startup raised $13 million in an expanded seed round in December. Last-mile delivery services, both on the ground and in the sky have seen significant growth in recent years as the pandemic increased delivery orders. As the sidewalks and streets get more crowded, here’s a table to help you understand the little robots you might be sharing the roads within the near future.
Zomato Invests in Mukunda
Indian multinational food delivery company Zomato has acquired a 16.66% stake in Mukunda Foods, a food robotics company that designs and manufactures smart robotic equipment for restaurant automation. The stake comes with a price tag of $5 million. The deal puts Mukunda at $30 million valuation.
Mukunda Foods offers end-to-end kitchen automation solutions for QSR and Cloud brands and their six products have been installed in over 2000 locations. Their unique proposition is Nucleus, kitchen automation as a service (KAAS), which enables brands to expand cloud kitchens to new locations with a fully operational kitchen equipped with automated equipment, no rentals on property, no operational concerns, high consistency of products, and highly scalable profits. They’ve already partnered with several brands in Bangalore and plan to expand to other cities in India.
There are a lot of opportunities for synergy since Mukunda Foods serves ghost kitchens and the ghost kitchens on Zomato have carved niches with loyal customer bases. There’s also a significant market opportunity since the Indian cloud kitchen market is projected to be between $2 and $2.8 billion USD by 2025.
Ramen on wheels
In a commercial that debuted this month, Nissan showcased the e-4ORCE technology on its new Ariya by putting it on a self-driving car that delivers hot bowls of ramen to customers. The technology is designed to reduce abruptness and swaying for passenger comfort which is great for making sure that ramen soup doesn’t spill. On the Ramen Counter, the soup bowl sits on a flat tray and twin electric motors independently control the front and rear wheels.
Unfortunately, it looks like this is more of a concept for advertising the Nissan Ariya and Nissan probably won’t make this available commercially but it’s cool to imagine a fresh bowl of ramen zooming down the counter to you. You can watch the video below.
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