Did Manufacturers Use Arduino to Make Robots?



If, we want to know how to make robots?

Why we are talking about how to make robots to understand what components need and how to develop the circuit board so, as to understand the manufacturing point of view and what is beneficial for manufacturing the robots.

You are a beginner or you don't know about robotics but you want to create so you need to learn the basics and do some experiments with boards or robotics kits to be productive, improve muscle memory to get ideas on how to code, how to program & programming language you can code the board with Arduino Software (IDE).

Learn the basics of robotics with robotics kits, if you search on google the First Search result gives Arduino because Arduino is an open-source hardware and software company, project, and user community that designs and manufactures single-board microcontrollers and microcontroller kits for building digital devices, Arduino supports to make the particular task making a robot for beginners.


You are a learner then you can decide which parts are genuine for the board
to make a functional robot or you know to understand the point of view manufacturer because they want to sell the bots and earn a profit so you can choose the component which is provided to the manufacturer at a certain time of a cycle to get produce more robots to be commercialized.

Why do we continue talking about all things to discover "DID the MANUFACTURE USE ARDUINO TO MAKE a ROBOT?" exactly we see the question also we won't answer, but we must know the whole scenario to understand the answer.


How Arduino helps make robots



An Arduino board is composed of a microcontroller, some LEDs, a reset button, and many pins that you can use for input/output operations. With so many pins available, you can easily read data from sensors, or control different motors and actuators. That is what makes Arduino great for learning robotics for student purposes or for those who are interested in robotics, learning about the embedded system, and want to develop a prototype.
Basic is the first step to get Excellence

    Getting started with Arduino Robot


Why do we use Arduino?

Teachers and students use it to build low-cost scientific instruments, to prove chemistry and physics principles, or to get started with programming and robotics. Designers and architects build interactive prototypes, and musicians and artists use them for installations and to experiment with new musical instruments or create a prototype with Arduino.

Arduino's new high-performance series!


The Portent family, Arduino’s new series of high-performance industry-rated boards has been designed for demanding industrial control, AI edge processing, and robotics applications, they feature a new interconnect to support advanced peripherals. The first member of the family is the Arduino Portenta H7 - a dual-core Arm Cortex-M7 and M4 running at 400MHz. Portent H7 is capable of running Arduino, and Javascript Python making it accessible to a broad audience of developers.


What is the problem with Arduino? Why Arduino is not used in the industry 
 
Arduino provides basic kits for beginners and learning objectives, not for industrial, manufacturing point of view in my knowledge  because no one robotic company uses Arduino in robots we take the example of Boston robotics
like in Spot, Handle, Pick, Atlas, and Legacy Robots, Attabotics is also a robotics company that makes payload robots we see an example of an amazon [Amazon robotics] warehouse where kiva is used in these robots Arduino is not used.

                                        Amazon warehouse: kiva robot

Problem with Arduino

Arduino is not producing such kinds of robotics boards or kits which can be marketized because they are not following the market perspective or maybe the Arduino software should be more improvise in terms of debugging because debugging is than anyone makes a better idea into a market-level project or they may be commercialized in future.

Conclusion  
Arduino is produced only bords for education or learning purposes, not from the market point of view.