What to actually expect at the 2026 Robotics Summit & Expo in Boston
Thousands of attendees, hundreds of exhibitors, and a lot of motion control demos. Here's what's worth paying attention to.
Image credit: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
The 2026 Robotics Summit & Expo kicks off in Boston this week, bringing together what organizers describe as thousands of attendees and hundreds of exhibitors over two days.
I'll be honest: trade shows can be hit or miss. Sometimes you get genuine product announcements and interesting technical conversations. Sometimes you get a lot of booth swag and marketing speak. This one looks like it could lean toward the former, but I'm hedging until I see what actually gets demoed on the floor.
The Robot Report has been covering the lead-up pretty extensively, and based on their preview, the event seems weighted toward practical robotics applications rather than flashy concept demos. That's a good sign. The industry has enough concept videos. What we need is more "here's a thing that works in a warehouse right now."
Motion control is having a moment
One exhibitor I'm keeping an eye on is Allient, which will be showing off a range of motion and control technologies at the expo. If you're not familiar with them, they're one of those companies that makes the components other companies use to build robots. Not the sexy part of the supply chain, but arguably the more important one.
Motion control might sound boring (tbh, it kind of is until something goes wrong), but it's the foundation of basically everything in robotics that involves, well, movement. Which is most of robotics. The precision of a humanoid's hand, the reliability of a warehouse robot's wheels, the responsiveness of a surgical arm. All of that comes down to motors, drives, and the systems that coordinate them.
I initially thought the motion control space was pretty commoditized at this point, but after reading more about what companies like Allient are doing, I'm less sure. The demands of newer robotic applications (especially humanoids and high-dexterity manipulation) seem to be pushing the boundaries of what existing components can do. Whether that translates into genuinely new products at this expo remains unclear.
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