Where smarter storage meets smarter logistics.
Updated
January 8, 2026 6:32 PM
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Kioxia's flagship building at Yokohama Technology Campus. PHOTO: KIOXIA
E-commerce keeps growing and with it, the number of products moving through warehouses every day. Items vary more than ever — different shapes, seasonal packaging, limited editions and constantly updated designs. At the same time, many logistics centers are dealing with labour shortages and rising pressure to automate.
But today’s image-recognition AI isn’t built for this level of change. Most systems rely on deep-learning models that need to be adjusted or retrained whenever new products appear. Every update — whether it’s a new item or a packaging change — adds extra time, energy use and operational cost. And for warehouses handling huge product catalogs, these retraining cycles can slow everything down.
KIOXIA, a company known for its memory and storage technologies, is working on a different approach. In a new collaboration with Tsubakimoto Chain and EAGLYS, the team has developed an AI-based image recognition system that is designed to adapt more easily as product lines grow and shift. The idea is to help logistics sites automatically identify items moving through their workflows without constantly reworking the core AI model.
At the center of the system is KIOXIA’s AiSAQ software paired with its Memory-Centric AI technology. Instead of retraining the model each time new products appear, the system stores new product data — images, labels and feature information — directly in high-capacity storage. This allows warehouses to add new items quickly without altering the original AI model.
Because storing more data can lead to longer search times, the system also indexes the stored product information and transfers the index into SSD storage. This makes it easier for the AI to retrieve relevant features fast, using a Retrieval-Augmented Generation–style method adapted for image recognition.
The collaboration will be showcased at the 2025 International Robot Exhibition in Tokyo. Visitors will see the system classify items in real time as they move along a conveyor, drawing on stored product features to identify them instantly. The demonstration aims to illustrate how logistics sites can handle continuously changing inventories with greater accuracy and reduced friction.
Overall, as logistics networks become increasingly busy and product lines evolve faster than ever, this memory-driven approach provides a practical way to keep automation adaptable and less fragile.
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Humanoids are moving from research labs into real industries — and capital is finally catching up.
Updated
January 8, 2026 6:31 PM

A face of a humanoid robot, side view on black background. PHOTO: UNSPLASH
Humanoid robots are shifting from sci-fi speculation to engineering reality, and the pace of progress is prompting investors to reassess how the next decade of physical automation will unfold. ALM Ventures has launched a new US$100 million early-stage fund aimed squarely at this moment—one where advances in robot control, embodied AI and spatial intelligence are beginning to converge into something commercially meaningful.
ALM Ventures Fund I, is designed for the earliest stages of company formation, targeting seed and pre-seed teams building the foundations of humanoid deployment. It’s a concentrated fund that seeks to take early ownership in a sector that many now consider the next major technological frontier.
For Founder and General Partner Modar Alaoui, the timing is not accidental. “After years of research, humanoids are finally entering a phase where performance, reliability and cost are converging toward commercial viability”, he said. “What the category needs now is focused capital and deep technical diligence to turn prototypes into scalable, enduring companies”.
That framing captures a shift happening across robotics: the field is moving out of the lab and into early commercial readiness. Improvements in perception systems, model-based reasoning and motion control are accelerating the transition. Advances in simulation are also lowering the complexity and cost of integrating humanoid platforms into real environments. As these systems become more capable, the gap between research prototypes and market-ready products is narrowing.
ALM Ventures is positioning itself at this inflection point. Fund I’s thesis centers on the core technologies required to scale humanoids safely and economically. This includes next-generation robot platforms, spatial reasoning engines, embodied intelligence models, world-modeling systems and the infrastructure needed for early deployment. Rather than chasing every robotics trend, the fund is concentrating on the essential layers that will determine whether humanoids can work reliably outside controlled settings.
The firm isn’t starting from zero. During the fund’s formation, ALM Ventures made ten early investments that directly align with its investment focus. The portfolio includes companies building at different layers of the humanoid stack, such as Sanctuary AI, Weave Robotics, Emancro, High Torque Robotics, MicroFactory, Mbodi, Adamo, Haptica Robotics, UMA and O-ID. The list reflects a broad but intentional spread, from hardware to intelligence to manufacturing approaches, all oriented toward enabling scalable physical AI.
Beyond capital, ALM Ventures has been shaping the ecosystem through its global Humanoids Summit series in Silicon Valley, London and Tokyo. The series gives the firm early visibility into emerging technologies, pre-incorporation teams and the senior leaders steering the global robotics landscape. That vantage point has helped the firm identify where commercialization is truly taking root and where bottlenecks still exist.
The rise of humanoids is often compared to the early days of self-driving cars: a long arc of research suddenly meeting an acceleration point. What separates this moment is that advances in embodied AI and spatial intelligence are giving robots a more intuitive understanding of the physical world, making them easier to deploy, teach and scale. ALM Ventures’ Fund I is an attempt to capture that transition while shaping the companies that could define the next technological era.
With US$100 million dedicated to the earliest builders in the space, ALM Ventures is signaling its belief that humanoids are not just another robotics cycle—they may be the next major platform shift in AI.