Fri. Feb 13th, 2026

Humanoid Taking Over Warehouses

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A human-like robot, designed for logistics, that can combine multi-eye vision, dexterous hands and AI planning to handle complex warehouse tasks with human-like efficiency.

Humanoid Taking Over Warehouses
Gino 1 humanoid robot by Geek+.

Geek+ has unveiled Gino 1, which according to the company is the world’s first general purpose humanoid robot built specifically for warehouse operations. Powered by the proprietary Geek+ Brain, an embodied intelligence system trained on years of real world logistics data and large scale simulation, the robot is designed to deliver human-like performance across complex warehouse workflows including picking, packing, box handling and inspection.

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The system addresses one of the most persistent challenges in logistics automation, the difficulty of handling flexible, unstructured manual tasks that still account for a large share of warehouse operating costs. While many facilities deploy autonomous mobile robots for transport, tasks such as sorting, grasping varied objects and performing visual inspection remain labor intensive. Gino 1 is engineered to operate across these workflows, enabling a single humanoid platform to manage multiple mainstream warehouse functions. This makes it particularly relevant for high stock keeping unit (SKUs) fulfillment centers, e-commerce distribution hubs and large scale logistics operations seeking to reduce labor dependency while improving throughput and consistency.

From a technical standpoint, the robot features a fully in house hardware stack that includes multi eye vision for enhanced spatial awareness, three finger dexterous hands for adaptive grasping and force controlled dual arms to ensure safe and stable manipulation. At the system level, it runs on a Vision Language Action model supported by a fast and slow cognitive architecture that combines high level planning with real time execution. Integrated into the company’s core software platform, the robot demonstrated the ability to coordinate complex picking and handling tasks in dynamic warehouse environments.

The company states that the system is mass production ready and validated by a Fortune 500 customer within a few months from the launch, positioning Gino 1 as a warehouse native humanoid platform built for immediate industrial deployment.

By uttu

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