This Bengaluru Firm is Building Robots That Won’t Wait for Your Instructions

CynLr plans to deploy robots in factories by year-end or early next year, alongside raising fresh funding.
CynLr company CyRo robotic arm
Robotics has become central to modern manufacturing. From automobiles to electronics, semiconductors, logistics and warehouses, factories worldwide rely on robotic arms and machines. The International Federation of Robotics (IFR) World Robotics 2024 report shows that the global stock of industrial robots reached 4.28 million in 2023, a 10% rise from the previous year. Asia leads, with China accounting for 51% of global installations at 2,76,288 units. India is catching up fast, installing a record 8,510 robots in 2023. Key trends for 2025 include the rise of AI and humanoids, a push for sustainability, new models like robot-as-a-service (RaaS) and robotics to offset global labour shortages. CynLr, a Bengaluru-based robotics startup, is building machines that can adapt to new tasks
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Sanjana Gupta
An information designer by training, Sanjana likes to delve into deep tech and enjoys learning about quantum, space, robotics and chips that build up our world. Outside of work, she likes to spend her time with books, especially those that explore the absurd.
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