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.
Keep Reading
A closer look at the tech, AI, and open ecosystem behind Tien Kung 3.0’s real-world push
Updated
February 18, 2026 8:03 PM

Humanoid robots working in a warehouse. PHOTO: ADOBE STOCK
Humanoid robotics has advanced quickly in recent years. Machines can now walk, balance, and interact with their surroundings in ways that once seemed out of reach. Yet most deployments remain limited. Many robots perform well in controlled settings but struggle in real-world environments. Integration is often complex, hardware interfaces are closed, software tools are fragmented, and scaling across industries remains difficult.
Against this backdrop, X-Humanoid has introduced its latest general-purpose platform, Embodied Tien Kung 3.0. The company positions it not simply as another humanoid robot, but as a system designed to address the practical barriers that have slowed adoption, with a focus on openness and usability.
At the hardware level, Embodied Tien Kung 3.0 is built for mobility, strength, and stability. It is equipped with high-torque integrated joints that provide strong limb force for high-load applications. The company says it is the first full-size humanoid robot to achieve whole-body, high-dynamic motion control integrated with tactile interaction. In practice, this means the robot is designed to maintain balance and execute dynamic movements even in uneven or cluttered environments. It can clear one-meter obstacles, perform consecutive high-dynamic maneuvers, and carry out actions such as kneeling, bending, and turning with coordinated whole-body control.
Precision is also a focus. Through multi-degree-of-freedom limb coordination and calibrated joint linkage, the system is designed to achieve millimeter-level operational accuracy. This level of control is intended to support industrial-grade tasks that require consistent performance and minimal error across changing conditions.
But hardware is only part of the equation. The company pairs the robot with its proprietary Wise KaiWu general-purpose embodied AI platform. This system supports perception, reasoning, and real-time control through what the company describes as a coordinated “brain–cerebellum” architecture. It establishes a continuous perception–decision–execution loop, allowing the robot to operate with greater autonomy and reduced reliance on remote control.
For higher-level cognition, Wise KaiWu incorporates components such as a world model and vision-language models (VLM) to interpret visual scenes, understand language instructions, and break complex objectives into structured steps. For real-time execution, a vision-language-action (VLA) model and full autonomous navigation system manage obstacle avoidance and precise motion under variable conditions. The platform also supports multi-agent collaboration, enabling cross-platform compatibility, asynchronous task coordination, and centralized scheduling across multiple robots.
A central part of the platform is openness. The company states that the system is designed to address compatibility and adaptation challenges across both development and deployment layers. On the hardware side, Embodied Tien Kung 3.0 includes multiple expansion interfaces that support different end-effectors and tools, allowing faster adaptation to industrial manufacturing, specialized operations, and commercial service scenarios. On the software side, the Wise KaiWu ecosystem provides documentation, toolchains, and a low-code development environment. It supports widely adopted communication standards, including ROS2, MQTT, and TCP/IP, enabling partners to customize applications without rebuilding core systems.
The company also highlights its open-source approach. X-Humanoid has open-sourced key components from the Embodied Tien Kung and Wise KaiWu platforms, including the robot body architecture, motion control framework, world model, embodied VLM and cross-ontology VLA models, training toolchains, the RoboMIND dataset, and the ArtVIP simulation asset library. By opening access to these elements, the company aims to reduce development costs, lower technical barriers, and encourage broader participation from researchers, universities, and enterprises.
Embodied Tien Kung 3.0 enters a market where technical progress is visible but large-scale adoption remains uneven. The gap is not only about movement or strength. It is about integration, interoperability, and the ability to operate reliably and autonomously in everyday industrial and commercial settings. If platforms can reduce fragmentation and simplify deployment, humanoid robots may move beyond demonstrations and into sustained commercial use.
In that sense, the significance of Embodied Tien Kung 3.0 lies less in isolated technical claims and more in how its high-dynamic hardware, embodied AI system, open interfaces, and collaborative architecture are structured to work together. Whether that integrated approach can close the deployment gap will shape how quickly humanoid robotics becomes part of real-world operations.