Canadian firm’s humanoid targets hazardous factory work with 2027 production plans
- Whoa, that's mega-illegal. Mirsee Robotics is pushing the MH3 humanoid into 2027 mass production, targeting hazardous factory floors with serious torque. This isn’t just a shiny toy; it’s a wheeled mobile platform with 31 degrees of freedom, lifting 66 pounds per arm and running for ten hours on a single charge. The real hack? Teleoperation via VR headset and motion-tracking gloves, letting operators control the bot from 1,500 km away. It’s got Hadron Vision for stereo perception and Mecanum wheels for holonomic movement in tight spaces. While Weave Robotics is tidying up households, Mirsee is automating the dangerous stuff. I’ll swap that node in twelve minutes to get us on the deployment list. It’s physical layer AI at its finest—robots, factories, rockets, and zero human risk.