Android Auto's Gaming Push Has Nothing to Do With Robotics, and That's the Problem With Tech Coverage
I keep seeing robotics news buried under consumer gadget fluff, and honestly, it's getting old.
Image credit: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
Look, here's the thing. I spent my morning coffee scrolling through what passes for tech news these days, and I found myself reading about playing Angry Birds on your car's dashboard. Twice. Two separate articles about the same feature, both treating it like some kind of breakthrough.
Meanwhile, I called my old colleague at Fanuc last week, and he mentioned they're dealing with a genuine labour shortage in their service division. Nobody's writing about that.
The State of Tech Journalism
I'll be honest, I don't know when we decided that gaming on Android Auto was more newsworthy than, say, the ongoing challenges in warehouse automation deployment. When I was at Kuka, we used to joke that the trade press only showed up when something caught fire or when a CEO said something quotable. The actual engineering work? The incremental improvements that kept factories running? Crickets.
The sources I'm seeing today are basically the same article published twice, both focused on making "car downtime less boring." That's fine, I suppose. People get bored. But calling this technology coverage is a stretch.
What We're Actually Missing
Here's what frustrates me. There's real news happening in industrial automation right now. Supply chain issues with servo motors haven't fully resolved. The integration challenges between legacy PLCs and newer collaborative systems remain, well, challenging. I've heard rumours (and I want to stress these are just rumours from contacts, nothing confirmed) about some interesting developments in gripper technology coming out of Germany.
But you won't read about any of that in mainstream tech publications. You'll read about Gamesnacks.
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