From your shop floor to a working robot.
In plain language: what actually happens between your team putting on a vest and a robot somewhere learning to do skilled work. (In the research world, this is called embodied intelligence — but the idea is simple.)
Your team puts on a vest and gloves.
The vest and gloves are lightweight — about the same as a hi-vis vest you'd wear on a worksite. They go on at the start of a shift and come off at the end.
Inside the fabric, there are small motion sensors. The same kind of sensor that's in any smartphone. They sense how the body moves and where the hands go.
The gear writes down how your team moves.
Throughout the day, the sensors record movement. How arms swing. How hands grip. How the body shifts from one task to the next.
Think of it like a really detailed Fitbit — but for the whole upper body instead of just one wrist. Numbers, not pictures.
Our system studies the movement and learns the work.
Here's the thing about skilled work: you can't write it down. There is no manual for "how to actually install a window," or "how to fold a dumpling so it doesn't fall apart." Only the people who do it know.
Our partner nunchi builds the learning system. It watches the motion data — thousands of hours of it, from many different workers — and figures out the patterns. The handle of a tool gets gripped a certain way. The weight shifts a certain way before a lift.
The learning goes into real robots.
Our partner peaq runs the network that gets the learning onto those machines. Think of it as the delivery system — making sure the right "skill" reaches the right robot.
Those robots then do the kind of work that's dangerous, or repetitive, or where there just aren't enough hands to go around. Not replacing your team — taking on the jobs that nobody wants or that hurt people to do.
And the cycle keeps going — and you keep getting paid.
Robots in the field send back what they learn. Your team keeps generating new data. The system keeps getting better.
As long as your business keeps the gear on the floor, the hours keep counting, and the payments keep coming. $10 per hour, per worker, every month.
A quick word on privacy.
Motion is what we need — how arms swing, how hands grip, how the body shifts from one task to the next. The data isn't tied to a name or a face. Everything else stays where it belongs — in your shop.
Who's behind this.
We build imiteq with two partners who handle different parts of the system. Plain English versions:
nunchi builds the system that turns movement into something a machine can learn from. They're the part that watches the motion data and figures out the patterns.
peaq runs the network that gets what's been learned onto actual robots in the field. They make sure the right skill reaches the right machine, reliably.
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