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Showing posts with label Humanoid robots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Humanoid robots. Show all posts

Sunday, January 18, 2026

A retail investors focused report on Robotics and Humanoids for January 2026

                                                

Humanoids and robotics (2026+) — market potential, reality checks, and the best-positioned public companies for retail investors!

Executive summary

Humanoid robotics is moving from “AI demos” to early industrial pilots, but the investable opportunity set for public-market retail investors still skews toward enablers and bottleneck suppliers (actuation, precision gearing, sensors/analog, and critical materials) rather than pure-play humanoid OEMs (many are private). The market’s ceiling could be very large, but credible forecasts vary widely—reflecting real uncertainty around unit economics, reliability, safety, and throughput.

Recent institutional research/media coverage frames the humanoid opportunity as potentially large (e.g., Barclays’ optimistic scenario suggests ~$200B by 2035), while other reputable forecasts are far more conservative (e.g., Goldman Sachs projecting ~$38B by 2035).


1) Market size: a wide range is the honest answer

Forecasts differ substantially because commercialization hinges on three variables that are still unproven at scale:

  1. Robot cost trajectory (BOM + manufacturing yield + warranty)

  2. Task productivity (cycle times, failure modes, autonomy level)

  3. Operating model (deployment, monitoring, maintenance, safety compliance)

Examples of the spread:

  • Goldman Sachs (Feb 2024): humanoid TAM projected at ~$38B by 2035.

  • Barclays (reported Jan 2026): an optimistic scenario as high as ~$200B by 2035.

  • ABI Research (2025 chart/data): humanoids “essentially non-existent” today, but forecasts ~$6.5B by 2030 (with very high growth assumptions).

  • Grand View Research: $1.55B (2024) → ~$4.04B (2030) (more modest CAGR).

Investor implication: 

This is a classic “big upside, high model risk” market

It rewards owning the picks-and-shovels that get pulled forward even if humanoid adoption is slower than hype.


2) What is actually happening now (signal vs. noise)

The most credible near-term demand is industrial and logistics pilots where:

  • tasks are repetitive,

  • environments are semi-structured,

  • ROI can be measured,

  • supervision is acceptable early.

Evidence of real pilot activity:

  • BMW + Figure: BMW publicly described testing humanoids in production for ergonomically difficult tasks (2024).

  • Figure updates highlight operational learnings from BMW deployments (company statements).

  • Mercedes-Benz + Apptronik: Reuters reported Mercedes taking a stake and testing humanoid robots in factories (2025).

  • Amazon + Agility Robotics (Digit): Amazon described Digit as part of its robotics initiatives; Agility stated deliveries to partner-program customers in 2024 and broader availability in 2025.

Reality check: “Mass production in 2026” headlines exist (e.g., some OEM statements), but the market should assume limited volumes first, with scaling gated by reliability and cost.


3) Where the money is likely to accrue first

For public-market investors, the best risk-adjusted exposure is usually in components with:

  • high switching costs (qualification + reliability),

  • structural scarcity (capacity-constrained suppliers),

  • cross-OEM demand (everyone needs the same parts).

The four bottlenecks that matter most

  1. Actuators & motion (motors + drives + mechanical integration)

  2. Precision gearing/reducers (strain-wave / RV)

  3. Sensors + analog/power (the “nervous system”)

  4. Rare-earth magnets/materials (NdPr → high-performance motors)


4) “Best positioned to grow and prosper”: top public-company shortlist (retail-investor accessible)

Below are five names I would prioritize for a Canadian or U.S. retail investor seeking the “supplier-first” humanoid/robotics thesis, with an emphasis on “under-the-radar” relative to megacap OEMs.

1) Schaeffler (Germany; often accessible via international brokerage / ADR depending on platform)

Why it fits: Schaeffler is explicitly positioning as a humanoid component supplier, focusing on key components like actuators and announcing multiple humanoid-related initiatives and partnerships.
Why it’s attractive for your scenario: Direct “picks-and-shovels” posture for humanoids, but backed by a broader industrial/mechatronics base.

2) Nabtesco (Japan; often accessible via international brokerage)

Why it fits: Precision reducers are a gating item in high-DOF robots. Nabtesco states it has ~60% share (company estimate) in precision reduction gears for medium-to-large industrial robot joints.
Why it matters: If humanoids scale, demand for compact, high-torque, low-backlash joints scales with it—often faster than OEM unit growth.

3) Harmonic Drive Systems (Japan; sometimes available OTC depending on broker)

Why it fits: Strain-wave gearing is foundational for compact humanoid joints. Harmonic Drive has invested to expand capacity historically (illustrative of demand pressure).
Why it matters: In many humanoid designs, the reducer is a cost and availability bottleneck.

4) MP Materials (NYSE: MP)

Why it fits: Rare-earth magnets are strategic and supply-constrained. MP has a major DoD-backed buildout plan including a second U.S. magnet facility (“10X Facility”) expected to begin commissioning in 2028, plus other downstream steps to expand domestic supply.
Why it matters: Humanoids are “motor-heavy.” If unit volumes rise, the magnet/motor supply chain becomes an enabling constraint, not an afterthought.

5) Texas Instruments (NASDAQ: TXN)

Why it fits: Robots are, at scale, an analog/power and motor-control story as much as an AI story. TI is a long-cycle supplier of analog, power management, and embedded control components that appear across industrial automation and robotics. (This is the “quiet compounder” category.)
Why it matters: Even if humanoids take longer, robotics in general (industrial automation) continues to consume these components.


5) A practical “Humanoid + Robotics” watchlist map (so you can expand beyond the top five)

If you want a deeper bench to follow, here’s how I would structure it:

A) Mechanical bottlenecks (high leverage to humanoid scaling)

  • Nabtesco (precision reducers)

  • Harmonic Drive Systems (strain-wave gears)

  • Schaeffler (actuators / humanoid components)

B) Materials constraint / geopolitics

  • MP Materials (NdPr / magnets supply chain buildout)

C) Robotics “nervous system”

  • Texas Instruments (analog/power/control)

  • Analog Devices / onsemi / STMicro (similar thesis: sensing + power + industrial IO)

D) OEM activity (watch for proof of volume, but don’t rely on it)

  • Tesla Optimus timelines and commentary can move sentiment, but execution is uncertain.

  • Automotive factories remain a credible first beachhead (BMW/Figure; Mercedes/Apptronik).


6) Key risks retail investors should underwrite

  1. Adoption takes longer than headlines imply (safety, uptime, maintenance)

  2. Unit economics disappoint (BOM cost vs. task productivity)

  3. Component commoditization (if supply expands quickly and pricing power fades)

  4. Policy/geopolitics (rare earths, export controls, onshoring)

  5. Valuation risk (many robotics-adjacent names can get “theme-priced”)


7) What I would monitor quarterly (simple retail checklist)

  • Pilot-to-rollout conversions: Are pilots turning into multi-site deployments? (BMW/Figure-type updates)

  • Component capacity expansions: reducer/gear output, actuator supply agreements, magnet capacity milestones

  • Cost-down evidence: BOM reductions and service/warranty experience

  • Regulatory & safety posture: workplace deployment standards, incident rates

  • OEM “real work” metrics: hours run, tasks completed, supervised autonomy trends (when disclosed)


Bottom line

For a Canadian/U.S. retail investor who wants “humanoids + robotics” exposure without betting on which humanoid brand wins, the strongest setup is a basket centered on:

  • Schaeffler + Nabtesco + Harmonic Drive (mechanical bottlenecks),

  • MP Materials (materials constraint),

  • Texas Instruments (control/power backbone).Humanoids + robotics: U.S./TSX-only “under-the-radar” supplier exposure (retail investor report)

Why suppliers can be the cleaner bet than humanoid OEMs

Humanoids may become a major end-market, but near-term commercialization is still likely to be pilot-heavy and volume-light versus the hype cycle. In that environment, the best public-market risk/reward often sits with picks-and-shovels suppliers that benefit from robotics broadly (industrial automation, mobile robots, warehouse systems) while retaining upside if humanoids scale.

The most “unavoidable” supplier bottlenecks across most humanoid designs are:

  • Actuation + motion control (motors, drives, servo loops)

  • Sensing (vision, depth, inertial, force/torque, safety sensing)

  • Power conversion (battery management, motor drivers, DC/DC)

  • Materials (especially rare-earth magnets for high-torque motors)

Below are five U.S./TSX-listed names I would prioritize to follow and/or consider for this “supplier-first humanoids” thesis, emphasizing companies that are not the obvious mega-cap humanoid headlines.


5 companies (U.S./TSX-only)

1) MP Materials (NYSE: MP) — rare-earth magnets: a motors-and-actuators constraint

What it supplies: NdPr materials and a U.S.-centric rare-earth/magnet supply chain buildout.
Why it fits humanoids: Humanoids are “motor-dense.” If unit volumes scale, magnet availability and geopolitics can become a gating factor.
What makes it investable now: MP has a major U.S. Department of Defense public-private partnership that includes (as reported) a 10-year price floor for NdPr and a 10-year offtake commitment tied to its planned “10X Facility,” with operations expected by 2028.
Key risks: commodity/price volatility, execution on downstream magnet capacity, political/regulatory risk.


2) Onsemi (NASDAQ: ON) — “robotics nervous system”: sensing + power + motor control

What it supplies: Industrial automation/robotics-facing portfolios in intelligent power, image sensing, and motor control—critical building blocks in robots of all types. onsemi explicitly positions offerings for robotics/industrial automation and “smart and mobile robotics” use cases.
Why it fits humanoids: Regardless of the robot brand, you need robust power electronics, sensing, and motor drive/control to run many joints safely and efficiently.
Key risks: cyclical semiconductor demand, competitive pressure, customer concentration in some end-markets.


3) Moog (NYSE: MOG.A / MOG.B) — motion control components that translate to advanced robotics

What it supplies: Precision motion components (e.g., motors and motion subsystems) that Moog markets directly for robotics, including performance-oriented motor solutions and broader “robotics and autonomous solutions” positioning.
Why it fits humanoids: Humanoids are essentially a stack of tightly coordinated motion axes. Suppliers with deep “hard-motion” engineering and reliability culture can see pull-through demand as robotics moves from demo to uptime-driven deployments.
Why it’s “under-followed”: It is not typically the first name retail investors associate with humanoids, despite direct robotics positioning.
Key risks: industrial cycle sensitivity; Moog is diversified—robotics may be a smaller slice.


4) Celestica (TSX: CLS / NYSE: CLS) — scaling hardware: manufacturing, robotics-capital equipment, and “physical AI” infrastructure

What it supplies: End-to-end design/manufacturing and supply-chain solutions with meaningful exposure to industrial/capital equipment and other complex hardware verticals; Celestica’s own materials highlight “Robotics and Automated Capital Equipment Solutions.”
Why it fits humanoids: If humanoids start scaling, the winners are not only the designers; they are also the companies that can manufacture complex electromechanical systems reliably and at cost. Celestica is a credible “scaling enabler” rather than a single-OEM bet.
Key risks: margin discipline in manufacturing services, customer concentration, the robotics linkage is more “enabling” than direct component IP.


5) Texas Instruments (NASDAQ: TXN) — the quiet backbone: analog + embedded for industrial automation and robotics

What it supplies: Analog and embedded components used across industrial automation; TI explicitly frames building “smarter, safer robotics” within its industrial automation resources.
Why it fits humanoids: The scaling of robots is not only an AI story; it is a power + sensing + control-loop story. TI benefits from broad robotics/automation growth even if humanoids take longer than expected.
Key risks: cyclical industrial demand; lower “humanoid purity” (but higher resilience).


How I would use these as a retail investor (practical approach)

A) Build a “supplier basket” instead of a single bet

  • Materials constraint: MP

  • Power/sensing platform: onsemi + TI

  • High-performance motion: Moog

  • Scaling/manufacturing enabler: Celestica

This creates exposure to multiple points of the humanoid BOM and scaling chain, while still benefiting from robotics/automation generally.

B) What to monitor (quarterly checklist)

  1. Evidence of scaling: multi-site deployments, not just pilots (OEM-agnostic signal)

  2. Component tightness: commentary around motor supply, magnets, power electronics lead times

  3. Cost-down progress: any credible “cost per robot” declines or simplified actuator designs

  4. Safety + uptime: incidents, warranty, and maintainability disclosures (rare but important)

  5. Capex milestones: especially MP’s magnet buildout timeline and downstream execution


Clear-eyed risks (what can go wrong)

  • Humanoids under-deliver on ROI versus simpler automation (cobots, AMRs) and adoption is slower

  • Component commoditization if supply ramps quickly (reducing pricing power)

  • Theme valuations compress even if fundamentals improve

  • Geopolitical shock (rare earths, export controls) can be both a tailwind and a volatility driver


Bottom line (U.S./TSX-only)

If your objective is “humanoids upside, but with supplier resilience,” my top U.S./TSX-only set to follow/investigate first is:

MP (materials bottleneck) + onsemi (sensing/power) + TI (control backbone) + Moog (motion) + Celestica (scale/manufacturing enabler).

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Below is a U.S./TSX-only model portfolio framework designed for retail investors who want exposure to humanoids and robotics via suppliers, not just robot OEMs.

The portfolios use the same five names, but weight them differently depending on whether the goal is capital preservation with theme participation (Conservative) or maximum thematic torque (Aggressive).

Universe (unchanged across both models):

  • MP – MP Materials (rare-earth magnets; motors & actuators bottleneck)

  • ON – onsemi (power electronics, sensors, motor control)

  • TXN – Texas Instruments (analog & embedded “robot nervous system”)

  • MOG.A / MOG.B – Moog (precision motion & robotics components)

  • CLS (TSX/NYSE) – Celestica (hardware scaling & robotics-capital equipment enabler)


$25,000 Portfolio

Conservative Model

Focus: resilience, cash flow, and exposure to robotics even if humanoids take longer

RankCompanyWeightAllocation
1Texas Instruments (TXN)30%$7,500
2onsemi (ON)25%$6,250
3Celestica (CLS)20%$5,000
4Moog (MOG.A/B)15%$3,750
5MP Materials (MP)10%$2,500
Total100%$25,000

Profile:

  • TXN and ON anchor the portfolio with durable industrial cash flows.

  • CLS gives “physical AI” scaling exposure without single-OEM risk.

  • Moog adds motion leverage.

  • MP is the asymmetric tail option if humanoids/motors scale rapidly.

Risk Character:
Low-to-moderate volatility; theme exposure without over-reliance on speculative adoption curves.


Aggressive Model

Focus: torque to humanoid adoption and supply-chain bottlenecks

RankCompanyWeightAllocation
1MP Materials (MP)30%$7,500
2Onsemi (ON)25%$6,250
3Moog (MOG.A/B)20%$5,000
4Celestica (CLS)15%$3,750
5Texas Instruments (TXN)10%$2,500
Total100%$25,000

Profile:

  • MP becomes the core thesis expression (motors = magnets).

  • ON and Moog concentrate exposure to actuation, sensing, and control.

  • TXN becomes ballast rather than anchor.

Risk Character:
Higher volatility; returns more sensitive to humanoid headlines, magnet policy, and robotics CAPEX cycles.


$50,000 Portfolio

Conservative Model

RankCompanyWeightAllocation
1Texas Instruments (TXN)30%$15,000
2onsemi (ON)25%$12,500
3Celestica (CLS)20%$10,000
4Moog (MOG.A/B)15%$7,500
5MP Materials (MP)10%$5,000
Total100%$50,000

Aggressive Model

RankCompanyWeightAllocation
1MP Materials (MP)30%$15,000
2onsemi (ON)25%$12,500
3Moog (MOG.A/B)20%$10,000
4Celestica (CLS)15%$7,500
5Texas Instruments (TXN)10%$5,000
Total100%$50,000

Monday, January 20, 2025

Androids, Humanoid Robots, whatever the label, they are coming. Now, Who is leading the charge into this lucrative, futuristic market?

 


Humanoid Robots / Androids: A 2025+ Business & Investment Report

1. Executive Summary

The humanoid-robot (or “android”) sector has moved from futuristic demonstration projects into serious R&D and early-stage commercialization. Continuous improvements in artificial intelligence, battery technology, and materials science have created a convergent point where mass production is on the horizon. This report outlines the key players, potential use cases, market drivers, and financial snapshots of the publicly traded companies most involved in developing humanoid robots.


2. Leading Companies (Ranked by Commercial Readiness & Technological Progress)

  1. Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA)

    • Flagship Robot: Tesla Bot (“Optimus”)

    • Why #1? Strong manufacturing track record, advanced battery expertise, and vocal commitment from Tesla’s leadership to deploy humanoid robots in industrial environments. The company’s large AI/Autopilot team provides synergy for real-time control and perception.
  2. Boston Dynamics (Majority-Owned by Hyundai Motor Group, KRX: 005380)

    • Flagship Robot: Atlas

    • Why #2? Boston Dynamics leads in agility and mobility for humanoid robots. However, historically, they have been slow to commercialize. Hyundai’s ownership could accelerate production capabilities—yet their path to mass production remains more cautious.
  3. Xiaomi (HKEX: 1810)

    • Flagship Robot: CyberOne (prototype)

    • Why #3? Xiaomi’s deep roots in consumer electronics and its extensive supply chain might allow it to scale quickly if (and when) it decides to commercialize CyberOne. However, the robot remains in conceptual stages, indicating a longer timeline.
  4. SoftBank Robotics (Subsidiary of SoftBank Group, TYO: 9984)

    • Key Robots: Pepper, NAO (social robots)

    • Why #4? Although SoftBank’s Pepper and NAO are not full humanoids on par with Atlas or Optimus, SoftBank has experience in producing robots at scale. With the right pivot, the group could expand into more advanced humanoid platforms.
  5. Others (Privately Held / Early-Stage)

    • Engineered Arts (Ameca)

    • Hanson Robotics (Sophia)

    • Apptronik (Apollo)


      These companies are developing sophisticated platforms but remain private or in earlier phases of commercialization. While they showcase impressive technology, they are not directly open to public market investment (as of early 2025).

3. Most Promising Mass Production Prospects

  1. Tesla

    • Production Advantage: Proven global factory network (in the U.S., China, Germany, etc.), advanced supply chain management, and battery manufacturing expertise.
    • Stated Goal: Elon Musk has signaled a plan to deploy Tesla Bot first in Tesla factories for routine tasks, potentially scaling to consumer uses.
  2. Hyundai Motor Group (Boston Dynamics)

    • Production Advantage: A major automotive manufacturer with strong industrial capabilities.
    • Potential: Could pivot from R&D to mass production if a clear commercial application is identified (e.g., manufacturing, logistics, healthcare).
  3. Xiaomi

    • Production Advantage: Known for producing high volumes of cost-competitive consumer electronics.
    • Potential: If Xiaomi invests heavily into robotics, it could leverage existing electronics and hardware supply chains, but the path to a robust humanoid is still nascent.

4. Use Cases for Humanoid Robots

  1. Industrial & Manufacturing

    • Repetitive / Hazardous Tasks: Welding, assembly, material handling in factories.
    • 24/7 Operation: Potential to run around the clock with proper maintenance, reducing costs.
  2. Logistics & Warehousing

    • Picking and Packing: Tasks that require human-like mobility and dexterity.
    • Automated Inventory Checks: Vision-guided robots can navigate aisles and catalog products.
  3. Service & Hospitality

    • Customer Interaction: Reception, information desks, basic concierge tasks.
    • Entertainment: Theme parks, advertising, or brand engagement.
  4. Healthcare & Elder Care (Longer-Term)

    • Patient Assistance: Helping move patients, assist nurses, or provide companionship.
    • Household Tasks: Potentially assisting the elderly or disabled with daily living activities.
  5. Research & Education

    • Human-Robot Interaction: Universities and labs exploring advanced AI, robotics, and ethics.
    • Demonstration Platforms: Showcases for next-gen robotics in STEM education.

5. Why This Market Is Worth Pursuing

  1. Rising Labor Costs & Shortages

    • Many developed nations face workforce shortages in manufacturing, logistics, and elder care. Humanoid robots can fill labor gaps for routine or physically demanding tasks.
  2. Rapid Advancements in AI

    • Large language models, computer vision, and sensor fusion systems enable robots to perceive and act more autonomously, increasing their utility and reducing the need for custom programming.
  3. Cost Reduction from Scale

    • As robotics manufacturing matures, component costs (motors, sensors, processors) continue to drop, making the entry price more attractive for businesses seeking automation.
  4. Potential for Wide Adoption

    • The concept of a general-purpose robot—capable of multiple tasks—expands far beyond the traditional limitations of fixed industrial robotics.
  5. Investor Appeal

    • Robotics is a high-growth, high-visibility sector that often commands premium valuations. Early involvement in leading companies can yield significant returns if mass adoption materializes.

6. Financial Snapshots (Publicly Traded Leaders)

Below are approximate figures and highlights as of Q1 2025. (Historical data from public sources; forward-looking figures are estimates.)

Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA)

  • Market Cap: Often in the range of USD 700–900 billion (fluctuates with market conditions).
  • Revenue (Trailing 12 Months): Over USD 120+ billion, primarily from EV sales, energy storage, and services.
  • R&D Expenditure: Estimated at ~5-7% of revenue, a portion now directed toward Optimus/Bot development.
  • Key Investment Note: Tesla’s robotics initiative is still a small part of total operations, but strategic leadership sees it as a future growth area.

Hyundai Motor Group (KRX: 005380)

  • Market Cap: Typically in the range of USD 35–50 billion (converted from KRW), depending on the unit of Hyundai in question (Hyundai Motor Company, Hyundai Mobis, etc.).
  • Revenue (Trailing 12 Months): Over USD 100+ billion across all automotive businesses.
  • R&D Expenditure: Hyundai invests billions annually in advanced tech; the portion allocated to Boston Dynamics is not separately detailed but is significant.
  • Key Investment Note: Boston Dynamics is not yet a large revenue driver but is a high-tech asset for Hyundai’s future robotics ambitions.

Xiaomi (HKEX: 1810)

  • Market Cap: Historically in the range of USD 40–60 billion.
  • Revenue (Trailing 12 Months): Often exceeding USD 50+ billion, primarily from smartphones, IoT devices, and internet services.
  • R&D Expenditure: A significant chunk is directed at electronics and software development; robotics is still a small but potentially growing slice.
  • Key Investment Note: Xiaomi’s robotics ambitions are nascent. If CyberOne or future android initiatives mature, Xiaomi could leverage its massive electronics ecosystem for rapid scaling.

SoftBank Group (TYO: 9984)

  • Market Cap: Historically in the range of USD 50–70+ billion (exchange-rate dependent).
  • Revenue (Trailing 12 Months): Over USD 40+ billion across telecom, investment, and tech holdings.
  • R&D & Investment: SoftBank is known more for large-scale tech investments (e.g., Vision Fund) rather than direct R&D. SoftBank Robotics (Pepper, NAO) could expand or pivot with enough internal capital.
  • Key Investment Note: SoftBank’s robotics revenues are relatively modest vs. broader group revenues, but there is potential if they decide to scale advanced humanoid platforms.

7. Strategic Outlook & Considerations

  1. Timeline Uncertainties: The gap between a compelling prototype and full-scale mass production can be substantial. Investors should be mindful of potential delays in product readiness, regulatory issues, and demand uncertainties.

  2. Competitive Dynamics: Specialized robotics companies (private or public) may emerge or partner with established manufacturers, posing either competition or M&A opportunities for the market leaders.

  3. Regulatory & Societal Impact: Worker displacement, ethical concerns, and robotics safety standards will shape how fast humanoid robots can be deployed in certain regions or industries.

  4. Partnership Opportunities: Automakers, tech giants, and AI firms may form alliances to spread R&D costs and accelerate time to market.

  5. Market Size: Conservative estimates see the humanoid robot market (and related services) potentially reaching tens of billions of USD in annual revenue by the 2030s, primarily driven by industrial and service robots.


8. Conclusion

Humanoid robots are at a pivotal stage. As of 2025, Tesla leads in potential mass production, Boston Dynamics/Hyundai are top in advanced locomotion and robotics R&D, Xiaomi shows promise with consumer-electronics scale, and SoftBank remains influential as a tech investor and producer of social robots. The sector’s future hinges on bringing production costs down, improving AI-driven autonomy, and successfully identifying (and serving) large-scale commercial applications.

For investors, the opportunity is significant but carries inherent technology, execution, and adoption risks. The potential payoff lies in capturing a slice of a transformative market—one that could redefine labor, service, and industrial operations for decades to come.


Final Note: Monitoring corporate disclosures, investor calls, and prototype demonstrations will be critical to staying informed. As with any emerging technology, the early winners may be those with deep pockets, top-tier engineering, and a clear path to practical use cases.

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