Think about a warehouse manager at 2 AM staring at a screen full of alerts: a shipment delayed, a robot arm stalled, a conveyor jam. Today, that manager is the only intelligent thing connecting the dots.
As humanoid robots start entering supply chains — picking, sorting, moving — there’s a dangerous gap: who coordinates them? How does a human supervisor actually control a team of AI-powered humanoids across a live warehouse floor without a PhD in robotics?
This device is that missing control layer — a single interface where humans stay in charge, and AI does the heavy lifting of real-time coordination.
Modern supply chains are too complex for any single human to manage in real time — but humanoid robots aren’t yet capable of making judgement calls on their own.
The result: Expensive robots standing idle, or worse, making costly mistakes without human oversight. There’s no practical device that bridges experienced human decision-making with AI-powered humanoid execution.
The device integrates AI decision-support with direct humanoid control, giving a single human operator the ability to oversee, redirect, and coordinate multiple humanoid robots across the supply chain — in real time, through a single interface.
AI handles pattern recognition; humans handle judgement.
The device continuously ingests data from all humanoids, sensors, and logistics systems — building a live map of where every robot is, what it’s doing, and what the supply chain looks like right now.
Like an air traffic controller’s radar — but for your warehouse floor.
When a bottleneck forms, a humanoid stalls, or a shipment priority changes, the AI surfaces the issue and proposes an action. The human operator reviews and confirms — keeping people in the loop for every decision that matters.
Like a co-pilot who never sleeps and never panics, but always defers to the captain.
Approved instructions go directly to the relevant humanoids. The device tracks execution, flags deviations, and updates the live map — creating a continuous feedback loop between human intent and robot action.
Like a conductor whose musicians respond the instant the baton moves.
AI
Humanoid
Supply Chain
Most supply chain tools automate tasks but remove humans from the loop. This device does the opposite: it uses AI to amplify human control over humanoids, not replace it. The registered design covers the AI-integrated control interface that makes a non-expert human genuinely capable of directing a humanoid workforce — a category that doesn’t yet exist as a commercial product.