In Episode 224 of The Robotic Report Podcast, hosts Mike Oitzman and Eugene Demaitre recap the key robotics information of the week. Our visitor this week is Michael LeBlanc, co-founder of Basis Robotics. The corporate is creating humanoid robots for deployment into difficult purposes.
Mike LeBlanc, co-founder of Basis Robotics
Having been a serious within the U.S. Marine Corps and a graduate of Harvard Enterprise Faculty, LeBlanc’s work sits on the intersection of nationwide safety, robotics, and management beneath stress.
Beforehand, LeBlanc co-founded safety robotic supplier Cobalt Robotics, the place he raised $120 million from top-tier buyers, led a 250-person workforce, and oversaw its acquisition.
At Basis Robotics, LeBlanc is constructing next-generation, rugged humanoids for the U.S. Division of Conflict and first responders. Mike additionally discusses the potential for the firm‘s robots to sometime construct buildings for human exploration of Mars.
Present timeline
- 4:37 – Information of the week
- 15:35 – Interview with Michael LeBlanc, co-founder of Basis Robotics
Information of the week
Melonee Sensible to guide KUKA’s new software program and AI group
Robotics trade veteran Melonee Sensible has taken a brand new place at industrial automation chief KUKA. She is now the chief product officer for the German firm’s new software program and synthetic intelligence group in Silicon Valley.
In 2023, Sensible joined humanoid robotics developer Agility Robotics as chief expertise officer, and he or she shifted into the chief product officer function in Could 2024. Sensible led Agility’s engineering workforce along with its newly fashioned product group.
Sensible has years of expertise within the robotics trade. Previous to becoming a member of Agility in 2023, she was the vp of robotics automation at Zebra Applied sciences. Earlier than that, Sensible was CEO of cell robotic maker Fetch Robotics till its acquisition by Zebra in 2021.
iRobot debt acquired by contract producer as chapter looms
The Robotic Report is continuous to comply with the newest developments round struggling robotic vacuum maker iRobot. In a latest SEC submitting, the Bedford, Mass.-based client robotic pioneer stated a Chinese language firm has acquired its debt and that it’s nonetheless on the lookout for alternate options to chapter.
Santrum Hong Kong Co., a subsidiary of Shenzhen, China-based Picea Robotics Co., has acquired a credit score settlement from associates of The Carlyle Group price $190.6 million in principal and curiosity, in accordance with the submitting.
“As of November 24, 2025, the corporate owed Picea $161.5 million for the manufacturing of merchandise, $90.9 million of which was late,” stated iRobot. “The corporate and Picea are engaged in lively discussions concerning a mutually agreeable decision of the non-payment by the corporate of quantities owed to Picea.”
In brief, iRobot will not be at present in a position to pay its contract producer, which is now additionally its major creditor. The Roomba maker owes a complete of greater than $350 million.
Humanoid says its first bipedal robotic can begin strolling simply 48 hours after meeting
Humanoid has introduced the HMND 01 Alpha Bipedal. That is the London-based firm’s first humanoid robotic, which it constructed from an preliminary design to working prototype in simply 5 months.
The Alpha Bipedal achieved steady locomotion solely 48 hours after remaining meeting, stated Humanoid. It has a bimanual payload capability of 15 kg (33 lb.).
Utilizing NVIDIA‘s Isaac Sim and Isaac Lab, the Humanoid workforce skilled greater than 52.5 million seconds of reinforcement-learning locomotion knowledge in simulation in solely two days. That is equal to just about 19 months of typical coaching.

