Our Hannover Messe countdown series—featuring Ontario manufacturers and technology companies that will be showcasing at the world's largest industrial technology trade fair—continues with Pablo Molina, Co-Founder & CTO of Kitchener-based Avidbots.
In this episode, Pablo shares Avidbots' journey from a small office in Waterloo to a multinational company shipping autonomous cleaning robots around the world. Pablo pulls no punches about Canada’s lagging adoption of robotics and lack of investment in scaling up the industry, both of which are challenges that he and the Canadian Robotics Council (CRC) are working to address.
The episode concludes with a preview of Avidbots' participation at Hannover Messe 2025, and his take on the rumours, thus far, of which musical act will be playing at NGen’s Hannover Messe reception.
Find Out More about Avidbots and the Canadian Robotics Council
Find Out More About Trillium
About the Making it in Ontario Podcast
Making it in Ontario is your window into what's next in manufacturing. Ontario’s economy depends on manufacturing, but the latest research reveals concerning trends that could undermine the sector’s strength—if we don’t address them. Join us as we talk to CEOs and other leaders at the forefront of the sector about productivity, strategy, talent markets and career opportunities, and the role of manufacturing in a prosperous and sustainable future.
This podcast is an initiative of the Trillium Network for Advanced Manufacturing. It is produced by Storied Places Media.
Welcome to Making it in Ontario, your window into what's next in
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:Ontario's manufacturing sector from the
data driven researchers at the Trillium
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:Network for Advanced Manufacturing.
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:I'm Michelle Samson.
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:Brendan Sweeney: And I'm Brendan Sweeney.
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:Michelle Samson: Okay, Brendan.
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:This is episode three in a series of five
episodes focused on Ontario companies
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:that are exhibiting at Hannover Messe.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah, and we're
gonna talk to, uh, Pablo Molina of
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:Avidbots today, uh, Waterloo based.
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:And stay tuned next week
for Waterloo-based company.
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:Um, we're gonna hear from, uh, Greta
Cutulenco of Acerta Analytics, one of
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:the leading AI companies in Canada.
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:Michelle Samson: Yeah, so we're
really looking forward to that one.
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:But, for this episode with Pablo,
we're really in for a great one.
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:I, you know, better get ready for this.
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:He's got some hot takes.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah, and some of
them kind of hearken back to what we
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:learned from some of our guests in
in, in the fall of:
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:Michelle Samson: Yeah, in that season
we talked a lot about productivity.
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:We talked about scaling up.
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:Giles Gerson brought up the Christmas
Tree farm analogy, which if you remember
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:that it was that we start building
these companies and then they get kind
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:of cut off and they get sent elsewhere
and we're not keeping them in Canada.
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:Uh, so, you know, all of
these themes keep popping up.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah, and so
Pablo has some ideas about how to
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:keep these companies in Canada,
and we kind of dig those ideas.
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:Um, but yeah, these
themes keep popping up.
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:So I guess we're, we're
hitting a nerve somewhere.
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:We're focused on the right stuff.
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:And you know, one of the themes that
come up today that we've heard before is
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:how great it is for, technology enabled
manufacturers, like Avidbots, uh, to be
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:located in and around the Waterloo region.
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:And so that keeps popping up.
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:And so we're really
seeing something there.
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:Um, maybe we knew that already
and we're just validating that.
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:But, um, it's a recurring
theme throughout this podcast.
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:Michelle Samson: It's tempting to say
there's something in the water, but
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:we all know it's much more than that.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah.
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:In the Grand River.
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:That Grand River water.
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:Michelle Samson: Ha ha!
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:And, uh, yeah, we, as we've been
doing for the past couple episodes,
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:we are wrapping this one up with,
um, a bit of a musical bent.
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:We're continuing to spread rumours.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah.
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:Spread rumours, speculate.
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:Um, but what we learned is that in a
past life or maybe in a past life and in
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:his current life, Pablo is a musician.
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:He was in a band, they were on the scene
in Toronto for a while and we didn't
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:know that, and so that's pretty cool.
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:Michelle Samson: And he's gonna be,
uh, tapping into this, uh, this musical
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:background that he has to give his
feedback on some of our predictions
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:for NGen's reception at Hannover.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah, and I do like
that he kind of validates one of
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:my ideas, but um, yeah, stay tuned.
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:To learn more.
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:Um, and interestingly enough, this
idea keeps getting validated because
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:Greta might have some similar thoughts,
but, uh, but we'll see about that.
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:So
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:Michelle Samson: All right,
and here's the episode.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Pablo,
thanks for joining us.
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:Uh, we understand that Avidbots
turned ten last year?
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:Pablo Molina: Uh, yeah,
it has turned 10 years.
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:Yeah, we incorporated in January 2014.
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:So yeah, it's been over 10 years now.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Based in Kitchener,
Ontario in the Waterloo region?
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:Pablo Molina: Yeah, our first office was
in Waterloo, then we moved to Kitchener.
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:So yeah, our headquarters in Kitchener.
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:We now have offices in, in Columbia,
India, Australia and also in the US.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Wow, so
tell us a bit about yourself.
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:Tell us a bit about Avidbots and tell us
a bit about the journey from, you know,
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:a small office in Waterloo to being a
multinational Kitchener-based company.
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:Pablo Molina: It is been definitely,
very exciting, very thrilling, uh, lots
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:of ups and downs, rollercoaster, yeah.
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:So we started in 2014, uh, basically
with my classmate Faizan Sheikh.
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:He and I, we've always been
interested in robotics.
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:Uh, when I was doing grad school,
it became very apparent to me how
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:underutilized were robotics in the field.
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:Like in everyday life we
rarely run into a robot.
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:And me coming from Waterloo and from my
master's as well, it was disappointing,
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:and it is still disappointing.
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:Robotics is at a very good place when
it comes to the core technologies, but
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:you don't see them deployed as much.
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:And so this is where we started
looking, I guess, what to do.
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:And we in fact started
doing snow cleaning.
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:We weren't doing floor
cleaning right away.
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:And when we were doing customer
discovery, it became apparent to us
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:cleaning is a very good application
because for service robots because
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:it happens very often every night.
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:So you are looking at cleaning
many hours every night.
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:So a very strong ROI so that very
clearly became our main goal.
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:And yeah, the reality is, uh, I think
we made some good decisions product wise
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:and we're using the latest technology
that we were available at the time.
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:And so we were able to enter
the market and do well.
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:We were able to really solve the
customer problem in a much better way.
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:It's been quite exciting to
watch the growth of the industry.
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:When we started, it was very, very small.
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:Now I think it's getting close to the $1.2
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:billion, the whole
cleaning robotics industry.
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:So it's amazing to watch it go from,
back then, one of our competitors used
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:to use sonar and you know, we come
in with LIDAR, we're like disruptive.
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:Then to watch now how things are changing
again with 3D LIDARs and all this stuff.
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:So it is amazing to have been through
all these changes and this evolution.
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:And, yeah, it is been always our
goal at Avidbots to become a large
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:company to eventually, hopefully, go
into the billion dollar evaluation
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:going public, all those goals.
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:That's still very much a north star.
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:The market is there.
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:I think we gotta keep at it.
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:We gotta keep working on it.
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:Our product is very good and we just
have to basically, yeah, make it happen.
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:And, of course, as we
scale, challenges change.
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:Challenges intensify.
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:We joke that it's a bit like the Olympics.
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:I guess like every stage of the company,
chances of success get harder and harder.
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:But we're here for the fight and we wanna
take it all the way and we think we can.
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:And certainly Canada a lot
more of this billion dollar
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:headquarter in Canada companies.
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:We're huge fans of Shopify and
what it's done to, the whole
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:community and the whole industry.
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:And I think we need to learn from that.
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:I think this is amazing how many
people they employ, how many
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:co-op students work there, how
the whole thing has transformed.
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:And so I think robotics
definitely needs that in Canada.
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:Brendan Sweeney: So tell
us, and spare no detail.
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:What is an Avidbot?
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:What does it do?
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:What kind of technology
was in it 10 years ago?
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:What kind of technology is in it today?
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:Pablo Molina: So we make
two products so far.
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:We have Neo, which is a large
floor scrubber is basically, uh,
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:more for industrial facilities,
for train stations, for malls.
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:And then we have Kas, which
is a smaller scrubber.
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:Both of them are floor scrubbers,
basically a machine that washes the
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:floor of the high traffic facilities.
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:At heart, I think Avidbots our
main differentiation is that we,
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:we really believe in a really
good experience for the customer.
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:We're firm believers that you
walk to a robot and you press the
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:button and it needs to clean the
whole place without any assistance.
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:And I think that's the big differentiator.
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:If you look at some of our Asian
competitors and to some of our
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:American competitors, we have
the lowest intervention rate
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:and the highest reliability.
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:So reliability and low intervention
have been paramount from day one.
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:And yeah, it's been quite fun and
challenging to, to make that happen and
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:the product has improved tremendously.
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:To give you a high level idea of how
it evolved, we were very pragmatic on
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:what we, entered, uh, what we attacked.
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:So we first attacked shopping malls.
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:Shopping malls are empty at night.
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:There's nothing going on.
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:Is an environment that's very static.
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:That's how we started.
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:So we just cleaned malls and then,
okay, let's go clean colleges.
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:Colleges are also fairly
static, fairly the same.
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:And then we started doing warehouses.
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:Warehouses, uh, to our discovery
are not actually that static.
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:They're very dynamic
and they change a lot.
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:So that was a big difficulty.
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:So we were very pragmatic.
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:And so as a company, I think we do have
another differentiation, most likely
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:is we have vertical specific software.
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:A lot of companies are there like,
yeah, robots just work everywhere.
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:That's just not true.
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:In warehouses there's very particular
challenges, particular obstacles,
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:particular situations that for a
robot to truly be autonomous, you,
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:you really need to handle well.
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:And that's what we have done.
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:So, uh, I think that's gonna evolve.
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:And then of course, Kas
is really the next stage.
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:We managed to achieve very
good levels of safety and high
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:reliability with a lower cost.
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:So it's a whole new, uh, perception
system, a whole new robot.
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:Now this is very much for retail stores.
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:Retail stores they're, as you can
imagine, even more dynamic, even
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:more challenges, more complexities.
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:And so yeah, we're super happy to
see Kas now released in the field.
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:We released it last year in the
summer and it's been doing quite well.
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:Uh, it's been able to really
delight people and we're now
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:talking to a lot of large customers.
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:So very exciting and that's a very large
part of the market, so we'll keep at it.
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:We need to keep improving,
much of things to do.
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:And yeah, our goal eventually is
to have a portfolio of products.
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:Potentially vacuuming,
potentially sweeping.
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:I think when we make the vacuum
cleaner, we're looking at even
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:reducing the cost even further.
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:That is also another difference I would
say with a lot of robotics companies
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:out there and Avidbots, is we, due
to the nature of our industry, we
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:cannot make a hundred thousand dollar
robot because we won't have an ROI.
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:We have to make it cheaper and
it is gonna get very exciting.
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:That's where, Kas is like a 22 inch.
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:If we make an 18 inch machine, uh,
be it a vacuum or be it a scrubber,
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:I'm personally quite excited because
we will have to make it cheaper.
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:And so you start getting to a point where
like you can start being able to rent
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:these machines for like $500 a month.
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:And that's when I can
start seeing this whole...
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:I can talk for a long time about this
whole trend of multi-application robotics.
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:Like, maybe you get a robot that
does your floor for $500 bucks, but
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:then you pay it a hundred dollars
and it becomes your security guard.
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:You pay it a hundred dollars, it
becomes your concierge at the front,
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:or a hundred dollars and it goes around
checking for hazards in your facility.
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:Like those are the kind of
things that like, will you pay
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:$30,000 for a hazard robot?
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:You probably won't, but if you
already have one and you're paying
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:like a little bit, just kind of
what happened with computers, kind
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:of what happened with the phones.
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:It's just a natural evolution,
I think that hopefully will
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:happen too, in our industry.
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:Michelle Samson: So Pablo, if I understood
correctly earlier, you talked about how,
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:like, there's still just so much more room
for people to be adopting robotics, but
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:that there still may be some hesitation
there or, you know, some, some friction.
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:What are those friction points?
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:And are you doing anything
to try and smooth those out?
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:Pablo Molina: Yeah so there, there
is this publication I really like,
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:like it's called the, I guess,
inflection points of industries.
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:You've seen it in computers, seen it
in cell phones that it's going very low
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:and then just exponential growth, right?
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:It takes over and it starts reaching
the hundreds of thousands of
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:units a year kind of numbers that
we all wanna see in industries.
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:They call it basically a combination
of, uh, cultural buy-in, economic
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:impetus, and just like reliability
and operation of the system.
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:I think that's a very good summary of what
it takes to achieve an inflection point.
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:I'm very happy to say, you know, we
started Avidbots and people would put
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:our robot online, we'll be cleaning
the Eaton Centre, right, with Neo,
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:and people put online and they'll be
like, oh, it's taking this guy's job.
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:It's so sad, this and that.
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:And so I would say, like, 50%
of the comments were negative.
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:But now we have a bunch of Neos
in Walmart and they're making
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:TikToks, so they're, it's hilarious.
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:I absolutely love watching what
people do to robots and how they
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:anthropomorphize them, and they think
of them as friends, and it's just,
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:highly recommend, very entertaining.
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:But, uh, yeah, then you read the comments
and it's like, 70% of them are positive.
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:They're like, oh my God, it's so cool.
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:So I have seen like personally,
viscerally myself, a radical,
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:uh, cultural adoption change.
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:Perhaps the pandemic helped.
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:I think just in general, people just
get it more so that is one that is hard
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:to touch, hard to change, but it is
now, I will say, in the positive trend.
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:Of course economic impetus, if anything,
I think is potentially the biggest.
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:If you could tell me tomorrow that
like making your car drive by itself
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:costed a thousand dollars more.
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:Will you do it?
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:Like I'm sure any consumer in this world
will pay a thousand dollars to have their
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:autonomous, now, if you go tell me, oh
no, autonomous car is $300,000, I don't
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:know how many people are gonna afford it.
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:So, the good thing is that as
the sensors are changing in price,
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:computer has changing price.
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:I will tell you, it is
been just amazing, right?
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:Like when I was a grad student, 3D
LIDAR was, you know, $30,000, $60,000.
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:I had a GPU that did like two
hundred gigaflops and I was like
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:so proud and it was like 400 watts.
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:I needed like double
power supply and stuff.
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:Today that thing is running in like
five watts, like it's unbelievable.
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:And there's now 3D LIDARs out
there that cost like $400.
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:What used to cost $60,000
when I was a grad student.
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:So it's to watch that.
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:And so economic impetus is gonna
get better as things get cheaper.
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:And then, yeah, then the operation
of the machine I think is just
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:time and doing things right.
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:So, to answer your question, maybe
long-winded way, as we get cheaper
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:and cheaper in the price of robots,
and as ideas, like that you pay
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:because it's a cleaning robot, but then
you can use all these other things.
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:I think the age for this multipurpose
robot, it's not here today.
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:Is it here in the next five years?
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:I think so.
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:And so this whole more exponential
growth hopefully starts happening,
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:yeah, in the next five years, or so.
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:Brendan Sweeney: So you are
producing robots, hardware.
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:Within that hardware, within that robot,
there was a lot of software and there's
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:a lot of advanced technology throughout
one of your autonomous cleaning robots.
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:But how does that interplay between
the hardware and the software work in
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:the company, in the design stage, in
the testing stage, in the production
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:stage, and in the servicing stage?
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:Because this is, we're really seeing a
lot more companies that are traditionally
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:understood to be manufacturers, but when
you dig around, you're kind of like, well,
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:you're kind of a software company that
just has a vehicle for its software too.
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:And many of these are located
in and around Waterloo.
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:Um, how does that all play out on a
day-to-day, on a week to week, on a month
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:to month basis, you know, in Kitchener?
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:Pablo Molina: Yeah, that's a very
multi-variable question, I guess.
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:There's a saying in the robotic
industry, it's called the decathlon
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:of startups, because if you're a
startup doing robotics, it's like
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:even harder than normal startups.
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:And it is true, we have to do a web
application, we have to do mechanical,
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:electrical, firmware, navigation
localization, perception planning.
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:So there's a very wide set of efforts and
then we have to get manufacturing, right?
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:So there's a lot of things
that have to get done right.
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:Uh, and so yeah, it is
certainly challenging.
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:I think, yeah, you're right, there's
lots of software companies out there.
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:I do think robotics is like hardware
enabled software in a way, really.
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:And, and yeah, oftentimes it
becomes a lot about the software,
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:about the quality of the software.
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:But again, I don't think we should
discount the importance of getting
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:the hardware right as well.
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:I think, uh, Kitchener-Waterloo is,
I don't think we do a good job at
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:advertising ourselves, to be honest.
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:I think we're a bit of a hidden gem when
it comes to the concentration of talent
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:and knowledge, uh, especially for the
kind of the series A, series B, seed,
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:kind of a skillset and suppliers and
supply chain, and knowledge, really.
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:I mean, ATS is here,
such an amazing company.
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:So many great automation companies.
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:There are so many knowledgeable
automation engineers around.
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:University of Waterloo, terrific job.
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:Uh, same with U of T and all this whole
southwestern Ontario, there's lots
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:of knowledge here and lots of good
suppliers, uh, quality suppliers, lots
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:of know-how to do manufacturing, lots
of know-how to do hardware engineering,
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:and good suppliers for low quantity.
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:And then of course the
talent and the software too.
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:So very multilevel here.
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:So it's really a great place
to do this kind of thing.
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:Yeah.
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:I guess the thing we need to work
on is maybe after that, like,
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:series B to get them to become, you
know, public companies, unicorns.
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:That is the part where I think we need to
pay attention to, because it's where we're
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:not succeeding, at least in robotics.
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:But I don't know about other areas.
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:Brendan Sweeney: What do you think
we could do specifically there?
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:Uh, and I agree with you that we
could be doing a better job there.
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:What do you think we could be doing
better or that we aren't doing that we
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:should start doing to achieve that, to
help companies in the scale up phase?
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:Pablo Molina: That's a very hard question.
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:I have ideas, but they are not gonna
be comfortable ideas, I don't think.
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:So number one, investment in this
country is lacking in that space.
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:[Unintelligible] has had
to go somewhere else.
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:There's not that many VCs
in that stage in Canada.
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:I also don't see, uh, government
strategies to support that.
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:If you look at China, Korea, Singapore,
Denmark, Sweden, all of them have scale,
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:basically groups for this kind of thing.
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:VCs and that kind of stuff.
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:I guess we have EDC, but in other
countries, they have mandates, right?
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:And they're much more focused.
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:So investment, big problem.
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:Uh, another one is adoption of robotics.
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:So, uh, I will speak
specifically about robotics.
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:I'm sorry I can't speak about everything.
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:I'll talk about robotics.
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:Canada is struggling.
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:We are not good in adoption
of robotics at all.
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:We are, uh, sadly if you take automotive
out of the equation, because you should,
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:because Toyota, yes, there's a lot
of great Canadian engineers, amazing
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:people, nothing to them, but of course
a lot of the things is from Japan.
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:So there's a bit of a mix.
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:So if we take out automotive, Canada
is the worst in adoption of robotics in
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:the G20, and that's not a overstatement.
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:That's a fact.
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:Let's take a pause and look at Denmark.
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:In Denmark, the top three
robotics companies have a
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:revenue over $200 million.
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:Thirty percent of their
sales, it stays in Denmark.
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:In Canada, actually, the CRC, I'm
part of the Canadian Robotics Council,
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:we're hopefully working on a grant
to get money to do this research.
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:We haven't done the research, but my
personal opinion is that our revenue
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:staying in Canada, of the top five
Canadian robotics companies, less
357
:than 5%, like I guarantee you.
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:So, it's hard to create an ecosystem
where nobody uses the thing.
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:I remember when I was, we were a startup,
series A, we had to go sell robots in
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:Australia, go sell robots in Singapore.
361
:That's my first customer.
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:I had to ship.
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:We had some problems with the first
units, so the key engineers flew to
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:like Singapore to fix it and stuff.
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:It's not good.
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:We, you don't get that quick feedback.
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:It's hard.
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:It's hard.
369
:It could be a lot easier
and it should be easier.
370
:So why is there no adoption?
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:I can talk to you about
that for a long time.
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:Again, the government could have
a bit of a strategy about it.
373
:Other jurisdictions, like Michigan,
Missouri, they have many programs
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:in place to ferment and to give
some grants to people to do this.
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:We started to do that in
Canada, but very slowly.
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:Uh, I don't see a national
strategy or an importance of
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:robotics as a key technology.
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:I think that's impacting that
second pair when in other
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:countries they put it in place.
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:And then last but not least,
training, of course, but I think
381
:training is also part of all this.
382
:So, I would summarize it like that.
383
:I think that's kind of what
is needed to really scale.
384
:I also do see one thing, it's gonna
be a bit tough statement, I guess,
385
:but, maybe with this tariffs and the
currency situation, this is gonna
386
:improve, but I would love to see a
lot more national pride and a lot
387
:more like, no, we have to make it to
the billion dollars and go public.
388
:And, uh, I do see a lot of, uh, in
the community, the celebration of
389
:selling your company for a hundred
mil to Google, Microsoft, whatever.
390
:Like that's like, Oh my God.
391
:Amazing.
392
:Thank you.
393
:You killed it.
394
:If you go to Silicon Valley and you
get into these meetups and you talk
395
:to these people, it's incredible.
396
:Everybody around you is like, oh yeah,
I sold like, you know, $2 billion.
397
:I've made three companies
a billion dollars.
398
:Yeah, you know, whatever.
399
:Then they become investors and so it's
all like this kind of a cycle, right?
400
:We can't have an ecosystem and
a cycle when as soon as you get
401
:to a hundred mil, boom, right?
402
:And then a lot of those things that are
sold become very successful, become huge.
403
:Like I, maybe I'm countering my own
point, but in Denmark is the same
404
:like Universal Robots, they sold
Universal Robots for $300 million.
405
:Their revenue is close to $150 right now.
406
:So like, uh, I, I'm not sure if the
Danish government and the Danish
407
:co-founders are happy now, they may
be a little disappointed of their
408
:decision, but it speaks to that, is
like, you plant the seeds and you do
409
:the hard work, and then the benefits
and the margins and the revenue and the
410
:earnings are all for somebody else later.
411
:Then you didn't stay in Canada.
412
:Okay, that's maybe a strong, I'm
opinionated, but I've noticed in
413
:trends and I have data points, and
so it is a strong opinion, but I
414
:think there's some data behind.
415
:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah, I think it
resonates in some of your comments too
416
:about, you know, well we can develop
and build these robots in Canada, but
417
:it's hard to find a customer in Canada.
418
:This sounds similar to our medical
device industry where we can build
419
:some really cool, some really
useful medical devices in Ontario.
420
:But to get them into an Ontario
hospital is really hard.
421
:But at the same time, UPMC and the
Mayo Clinic are champing at the
422
:bit to buy Ontario made technology.
423
:And so I think we're speaking
the same language here.
424
:I think we're on the same track.
425
:And you know, some of that
research with the CRC.
426
:You mentioned, I mean, that's
something that we can get behind
427
:and that we can help with.
428
:And while we're on it, why don't you tell
us a bit about the CRC and your role in
429
:it and what you're looking to do there?
430
:Pablo Molina: CRC, really
exciting development.
431
:Uh, I was with them from a long
time, I guess, but, so it is
432
:a volunteer run organization.
433
:We are all trying to do is unify
the voice of robotics in Canada.
434
:Again, we're firm believers
that, robotics is a technology.
435
:It is amazing what it
can do to the country.
436
:we're talking about our
productivity problems.
437
:We're talking about how we're the worst in
the G20 and adopting advanced automation.
438
:We've been saying this for the past five
years, and now I guess it's becoming
439
:front and center, which is good.
440
:We're happy.
441
:We're like, yeah, we've been saying that.
442
:so, that's the whole goal here is to try
and really unify our voices and become
443
:the place where we can all come together
and talk more and try and move the, you
444
:know, some of the conversations forward.
445
:Um, the CRC is divided into like
a government committee, education
446
:committee, and the industrial committee.
447
:And we have, uh, outdoor
robotics and indoor robotics.
448
:I am the co-chair of the
industrial indoor robotics.
449
:Then we also, I'm also part of the
executive group and part of the board.
450
:We're hoping to, yeah, soon
be able to have an executive
451
:director, hopefully this year.
452
:And so we're slowly growing.
453
:Um, I guess maybe the big projects that
we're working on, one of the things
454
:we're doing is like a Canadian Robotics
Test Center, so we want to have a
455
:place to showcase Canadian robotics and
also just robotics in general and help
456
:with this adoption problem, help with
the education, help with, uh, we're
457
:calling it like, I guess, automation
analysis that we will take an SME and
458
:then understand their problems and then
suggest them a robotics technology.
459
:So we are working on that.
460
:We have about, uh, $700,000 in donations
from Canadian robotics companies.
461
:We're working to try and get some more
funding to actually open up the center.
462
:We're envisioning like a 10,000
square foot facility, constant motion,
463
:a lot of people coming to learn.
464
:And yeah, just to try and
centers of excellence like this
465
:exist throughout the world.
466
:Germany, the usual suspects, Korea,
you'll hear me say China, Korea,
467
:Denmark, Germany, and all these countries
over and over again because all of
468
:them are doing very well on this.
469
:And all of them have
multitude of test centers.
470
:So anyway, so that's one
of the big initiatives.
471
:I guess other initiatives of course, is we
do reports and we do a yearly symposium.
472
:So I will highly recommend anybody
in the that is interested to
473
:learn more about robotics in
Canada, that is the place to go.
474
:Is a great, great conference.
475
:Lots of amazing speakers.
476
:We publish, also reports
out of each conference.
477
:I highly recommend going to our website,
the Canadian Robotics Council website,
478
:and you can download the reports.
479
:Really, really good information there.
480
:That's the hope is we wanna dig deeper
and really explain with more pragmatic
481
:data, the impact that we have on the
GDP and the potential growth here.
482
:To hopefully get a bit more attention
and more of a strategy going for
483
:the long term for Canadian robotics.
484
:Brendan Sweeney: I can confirm
it is a great conference.
485
:I was at the last one in June, 2024.
486
:And, um, packed room, great conversation,
great food, great view, uh, from
487
:up top where we were last year.
488
:And I am very much looking
forward to going again in:
489
:Um, Michelle, any?
490
:Michelle Samson: No, I think that's
a good transition to Hannover.
491
:Brendan Sweeney: It sure is.
492
:So Avidbots will be on
display at hannover.
493
:Uh, what are we gonna see?
494
:Why should we be excited about
seeing Avidbots at Hannover?
495
:And why is Avidbots as a company
excited about going to Hannover?
496
:Pablo Molina: Yeah.
497
:No, it was really exciting.
498
:Yeah, really thankful to NGen and
to the whole Canadian government.
499
:Huge move here.
500
:Lots of effort to co-host
the whole conference.
501
:So, really great to see, is a great idea,
uh, even more now with the whole situation
502
:that we're having with the United States.
503
:We are gonna be sending Kas.
504
:It's smaller.
505
:Europe is very tight, even
the malls there very small.
506
:Everything is just smaller.
507
:So, yeah, Kas is the
perfect robot for this.
508
:We tried to sell Neo a few years ago.
509
:It was a bit hard, Europe is
just very tight and so, yeah.
510
:And then of course Kas also has
the latest safety standards,
511
:everything properly for that market.
512
:So, we're looking at Germany, France,
and UK and everything, and, super,
513
:super appreciative of the effort
of the trade commissioners there.
514
:We're talking to them, trying
to get some help to settle down.
515
:We're looking to the distributors, so
yeah, that's kind of what we're doing
516
:is really lining up a bunch of meetings.
517
:It's, uh, amazing, really, like we
haven't done anything and we just put
518
:our name and we already have all this
inbound, uh, from people attending
519
:the conference wanting to speak.
520
:They're very organized
in Europe, it seems.
521
:Very, like, I wanna make a
schedule of what I'm gonna do.
522
:North America you just show up and
whatever and, but no, Europe seems very,
523
:yeah, you have to prepare and it's very
good, very, very happy to see that.
524
:Uh, so yeah, we'll have Kas and it's
gonna be running around in the pavilion.
525
:That's gonna be cool.
526
:It's not gonna be cleaning, but
it's going to be driving around.
527
:Uh, so yeah, hopefully we can attract
some interest, Germany is super exciting.
528
:They're very into cleaning.
529
:Uh, they clean their grocery
stores three times a day.
530
:That's cool.
531
:And so, you know, selling them a cleaning
robot to a country that is so into
532
:cleaning is hopefully a good thing.
533
:And, you know, labor rates are high and
everything, so we're excited about that.
534
:Again, our product, we stand
for reliability and quality
535
:and low intervention rate.
536
:And so I think those values
resonate a lot with those
537
:countries and the way they operate.
538
:Brendan Sweeney: Mm-hmm.
539
:Do you have any videos of one of
your robots doing its thing, cleaning
540
:something with a cat riding it?
541
:Pablo Molina: That's a good idea!
542
:Brendan Sweeney: Because, if you
don't, maybe we need to, I've
543
:got a cat, and we could maybe-
544
:Pablo Molina: We need to do that.
545
:I have a video with my daughter,
when she was very little, she sat
546
:on top and then was driving around.
547
:So I have that.
548
:I didn't post it anywhere.
549
:Brendan Sweeney: Makes sense to me.
550
:Michelle Samson: Cute kids and cats.
551
:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah, we'll leave
this stuff up to the marketing people.
552
:Pablo Molina: That's right.
553
:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah,
so, um, this is great.
554
:Big things in 2025 from Avidbots,
big things in:
555
:things in 2025 at Hannover Messe.
556
:What's the one thing out of all this
stuff, whether it's Avidbots, whether it's
557
:a CRC, whether it's Hannover, what are
t excited for for the rest of:
558
:Pablo Molina: Uh, yeah, I mean they're
all, I think, exciting in different ways.
559
:Uh, yeah, Hannover is,
it is just a good job.
560
:It's great to see Canada
taking a leadership stance.
561
:You often don't see that
in other conferences.
562
:So it's, I think it's very smart
to support the Canadian companies
563
:that are going, so kudos to that.
564
:That's the kind of support I was
talking about in the commercialization
565
:and scaling stage that, you know,
we don't have too much and I think
566
:that's a step in the right direction.
567
:They should slowly continue to do that.
568
:and it is actual help, right?
569
:Like they actually help you shipping
things and they support you economically.
570
:So I think it, it makes a difference
and it's very appreciated.
571
:I'm excited again about the future and
the growth that we have at Avidbots.
572
:So excited to have Kas released
and Kas working well, and we are
573
:working on some large deals that
can really help us move forward.
574
:And yeah, just reach a scale really,
which we've been looking for a while.
575
:And then the CRC of course, we've been
hard at work for a while, is happy that
576
:it's growing and, and scaling up in
size, and let's see how this current
577
:situation can change that or improve that.
578
:I hope that whatever ends up happening
with economic stimulus or whatever,
579
:uh, is diverted towards this kind
of efforts and towards a heightened
580
:importance on advanced automation and
making us more productive as a country.
581
:I hope it goes well and I think that's
just gonna pay dividends down the line.
582
:Uh.
583
:So hopefully there's attention
to that and we can move forward.
584
:Uh, yeah, indeed.
585
:This is an exciting year.
586
:Robotics is going up and yeah,
Again, we're not yet in that
587
:inflection point, coming soon
and so we just gotta keep at it.
588
:Michelle Samson: Well, Pablo, the
subtext has been there throughout,
589
:but can we get on the record that
when Avidbots becomes a unicorn
590
:that you will be staying in Canada?
591
:Pablo Molina: You have no idea how...
592
:Well, as long as I am
here, that's for sure.
593
:As long as I am here, uh,
headquarters, at least R&D has to be...
594
:We owe it to these people.
595
:I mean, I'm a cog in
this beautiful system.
596
:There is amazing cogs in this
beautiful system called Avidbots,
597
:and they are the ones who have helped
build this, who have made the robots
598
:better and to make everything happen.
599
:So I mean, it absolutely,
I think it's so important.
600
:It's amazing to watch Shopify and
how much is impacted, how many, they
601
:hired, like, I've heard like a
thousand co-op students or something
602
:a year or something like that.
603
:It's like, oh God.
604
:Michelle Samson: Wow.
605
:Pablo Molina: And like, and yeah,
because they're huge company.
606
:They have a lot of code,
and imagine what that means.
607
:That's kind of what I mean.
608
:Like, I hope this changes the narrative.
609
:I hope our government and the institutions
that provide this kind of funding pay
610
:attention to the fact of how different
it is that you open a Google office
611
:versus you helping with that same
money, uh, opening or supporting local
612
:headquartered in Canada companies.
613
:It's just night and day, what
it does to the economy and
614
:all the earnings stay here.
615
:And then they went to TSX, I guess.
616
:Sure.
617
:But like, that's different.
618
:I guess what stock marketing
gets published in is a harder,
619
:more complex conversation.
620
:So I don't know about that,
about whether we'll, who knows?
621
:I hope to have that problem, to have
to debate between NASDAQ and TSX.
622
:But, uh, anyway, that,
that's a different one.
623
:But no, I think headquarters in
Canada will always be the thing.
624
:I think it's the guys who build
it and this is where all the
625
:know-how is where we wanna keep it.
626
:This is where I hope a lot of
these guys go make startups later.
627
:We gotta have more and I hope our
government, yeah, supports that more and
628
:that makes it a bit of a priority and a
bit of a thing that they need to support
629
:because yeah, this is how it's done.
630
:10 years of this, this is
how Silicon Valley is built.
631
:This is how those kind of networks
begin to happen, and we're kind of
632
:chopping it off in the middle now
and shipping it off somewhere else
633
:and it, we're never going to...
634
:Okay, this will be also maybe be an
opinionated statement, but super happy for
635
:all the EV efforts and all these things
that are being invested for Volkswagen.
636
:I'm curious though, like, if all
this investment, if a billion of
637
:dollars of that was put towards VC
funds to help local ground companies.
638
:Because that's what happens in China,
that's what happens in Denmark.
639
:Like, there's dedicated billion
dollar funds dedicated to grow
640
:and scale robotics companies.
641
:I have witnessed an unbelievable change
in the supply chain and robotics.
642
:When I started, nothing came from China.
643
:Not a single encoder, not a
single sensor, not a single motor.
644
:Today, like good luck building a
robot without parts from China.
645
:Like you just won't be able to.
646
:You'll be more expensive.
647
:When I started it was
German or Japanese LIDARs.
648
:Now, we're no longer using
German, we're using Chinese.
649
:And it's going to be like that.
650
:They're amazing.
651
:High quality.
652
:And so this is what happens
when you focus, right?
653
:When you put your head down, you put
the money and you support the smart
654
:people, they're gonna make it happen.
655
:It's just, but are you
going to do it right?
656
:I don't see us being very
nationalist and investing our
657
:resources in a nationalist way.
658
:I hope this current situation changes
that and makes us more focused on
659
:supporting locally grown and we
realize the value that it can bring.
660
:And Shopify, with all the
respect to everybody, it's not
661
:a government supported success.
662
:It's completely organic from them.
663
:Yes, it's in Ottawa.
664
:Great.
665
:But did Ottawa and the support system
and the network made it happen?
666
:If I go back to looking at our
competitors in China, it's amazing.
667
:The amount of funding they get from
the Chinese government is incredible.
668
:The same for the suppliers that
we're using for the LIDARs.
669
:Like it's, the government
is very involved.
670
:The same in Denmark.
671
:Like all the big successes
are all heavily, heavily, uh,
672
:supported by the government.
673
:So that's the point.
674
:They get that if they do that,
there's a lot of dividends.
675
:I hope that that's understood
a bit more wider in Canada.
676
:Brendan Sweeney: Great question.
677
:Great answer.
678
:We really struck a nerve there.
679
:Pablo Molina: A bit
opinionated, don't know.
680
:I would love to see the business plan
of the $7 billion Volkswagen thing.
681
:Maybe there is a business
plan and I don't know, right?
682
:I'm trying to be careful.
683
:I sure know that if you did a
business plan of a billion dollars
684
:to support advanced manufacturing
funding and scale up, it will be a
685
:knockout, home run, like no doubt.
686
:If you watch some of the people
I sometimes interview, like young
687
:companies in series C or A, where,
like, I have American VCs that ask
688
:me like, Hey, look at this company.
689
:And I'm like, there's some
smart people here, wow, these
690
:people are gonna make it happen.
691
:It's just, are we going
to believe in them?
692
:Are we gonna support them or
are we just gonna let it be?
693
:But again, Denmark,
China, they are investing.
694
:So it's not magic.
695
:There's logic to it.
696
:Brendan Sweeney: Okay, so last
question, and this is us starting
697
:rumors about Hannover, because we
know at one of the NGen receptions,
698
:there's gonna be a big guest musical
act, but they won't tell us who it is.
699
:So we're starting some rumors that no
one's confirming and no one's denying.
700
:And so far we've got Scorpions
because they're from Hannover.
701
:Pablo Molina: Oh, wow.
702
:I didn't know that, that's cool.
703
:Brendan Sweeney: We got Justin
Bieber on the maybe list.
704
:We got Chris Hadfield coming
and playing his acoustic guitar.
705
:Who do you think, which Canadian
artist, and I know Scorpions is not
706
:a Canadian artist, but they're from
Hannover, Germany, so, but who do
707
:you think should be up on that stage?
708
:Pablo Molina: I'm a huge
fan of Chris Hadfield.
709
:I've met him in person many times.
710
:He has the strongest, biggest forearms
and the strongest handshake I have
711
:ever experienced, that was just
borderline painful, a couple of times.
712
:Uh, and yeah, I was in a band in Toronto,
they played with him the year after.
713
:I'm so sad.
714
:I was gonna have a chance
to be on stage with him.
715
:That would be awesome.
716
:I will absolutely prefer that.
717
:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah.
718
:Pablo Molina: Maybe a Scorpions.
719
:That sounds so cool.
720
:They're, they're great live.
721
:I've watched them live a lot of times.
722
:They're, they're terrific.
723
:They're, little advanced age,
but they have played their songs
724
:together for 30 years, so I mean,
they literally complete each other's
725
:solos is pretty cool to watch.
726
:Brendan Sweeney: I think 50 years.
727
:Pablo Molina: It's unbelievable
to watch them play.
728
:It's just like part of the same
human it's awesome because
729
:they do a lot of duality, right?
730
:They do like the third and
the fifth and the solos, and
731
:it's just like, how are you?
732
:What?
733
:Are you the same person?
734
:Or no, you're two people.
735
:How are you so together?
736
:Brendan Sweeney: Klaus and
Rudolph, because the album Blackout
737
:is as old as I am and I'm 45.
738
:Pablo Molina: Okay, okay.
739
:Yeah,
740
:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah.
741
:Pablo Molina: Probably 50 years then.
742
:Brendan Sweeney: Pablo,
thanks so much for joining us.
743
:Uh, this was great, and look
orward to what's coming up in:
744
:with Avidbots and with the CRC.
745
:Pablo Molina: Awesome.
746
:No, greatly appreciated
for the opportunity.
747
:.
Michelle Samson: New episodes of Making it in Ontario are published weekly.
748
:Follow us now on Apple Podcasts or
Spotify to make sure you don't miss any.
749
:Making it in Ontario is an
initiative of the Trillium Network
750
:for Advanced Manufacturing.
751
:It is produced by Storied Places Media.