An industrial robot is designed to work- to build things. You see in car factories how the arms are putting the cars together- that is an industrial robot. They are programmed to make certain moves and perform certain tasks. The reason why companies use robots is because they don't have any needs (food, toilet, sleep) except electricity, so they can always be at work.
Robots are doing everyone's work for them. They are German robots.
Most robots are sold through distributors not directly from the manufacturer. We are a authorized Fanuc Robot integrator. Fanuc for example does not sell to the general public as they would through an integrator. Fanuc Robots are made in Japan and shipped to their USA headquarters in Michigan.
Daft Punk are not robots. The whole robot story is a facade to hide their real faces and was inspired by a recording accident in which their sampler exploded. They made up the story that they had been badly hurt in the accident and were reconstructed as cyborgs. They are human because recently Thomas Bangalter has been DJing in clubs helmetless.
A robot is a machine.
They don't have sensors.
Exploratory robots use motion, heat, and camera sensors.
lolpotides
There are many different kinds of sensors used in industry that would be called industrial sensors. Here is a good site for them www.i-s-i.com/
im pretty sure a doctor controlls it
robots can work 24 hours a day and humans can't :P
Industrial Sensors & Instruments, Inc. have been building sensors since 1983. Their website shows their large selection of the different sensors they manufacture. The descriptions they give of their products are both informative and educational.
In industrial production - sure.
nothing 600
Y. Bouchut has written: 'Robotique industrielle et choix d'investissement' -- subject(s): Economic aspects of Industrial robots, Industrial Robots, Investments
Fei-fei Ding has written: 'Master-slave control system for a novel robot design' -- subject(s): Industrial Robots, Robots, Industrial
I found several sites that said, "uv sensors, but only 2 that said, "industrial". The two sites are elecdir.com and ien.com.