Hercules1
1月前
Why AIBT Stock Is In Focus
AIBotics, Inc. (USOTC:AIBT) announced a strategic commercial agreement and joint venture initiative with ARYA AI Labs, a company focused on deterministic artificial intelligence systems and so-called “world models.”
According to the announcement, the agreement gives AIBotics access to ARYA’s deterministic world model platform, which the companies say is designed to support next-generation robotics, software and immersive technology applications.
The partnership includes three primary components:
A five-year platform subscription agreement
A binding intent to form a 50/50 joint venture between AIBotics and ARYA
An investor side agreement tied to future ARYA financings involving EHAVE participation rights
Management described ARYA’s technology as a new class of artificial intelligence referred to as “Paradigm III,” which the company says differs from probabilistic generative AI systems by using deterministic, physics-constrained models designed to eliminate hallucinations and provide repeatable outputs.
The companies said the platform is currently used in sectors such as aerospace, biotech and energy, where reliability, auditability and regulatory compliance are critical.
“This is a transformative step forward for AIBotics,” said Ben Kaplan, Chief Executive Officer of AIBotics. “We are gaining access to technology that reflects where artificial intelligence is heading — probabilistic chatbots and into deterministic, physically grounded intelligence that can model, simulate and operate in the real world. This positions AIBotics at the forefront of the next wave of AI.”
“Partnering with AIBotics and EHAVE moves Paradigm III from regulated enterprise into consumer scale for the first time,” said Seth Dobrin, PhD, CEO and Co-founder of ARYA AI Labs. “AIBotics brings the robotics platform, immersive technology, and global distribution we need to bring deterministic world models — AI that simulates the physical world without hallucinating it — into millions of consumer interactions.”
Company targets robotics, digital twins and immersive AI markets
AIBotics said it intends to integrate ARYA’s deterministic AI technology into several high-value sectors, including robotics, industrial automation, immersive environments and geospatial intelligence.
The companies stated that the combined technology stack is intended to support real-time modeling of complex systems for optimization, prediction and automation applications.
The planned joint venture is expected to pursue applications spanning government, enterprise and consumer markets, including:
Digital twin systems
Smart infrastructure platforms
Robotics deployment
Advanced training systems
Immersive AI-driven environments
Management also highlighted the concept of “living digital twins,” dynamic digital models designed to continuously learn from real-world operational data.
According to the company, the technology could help reduce development timelines, improve performance and support commercialization across industries including manufacturing, infrastructure and robotics.
Why This Matters For Investors
The announcement may attract investor attention because it places AIBotics within several rapidly expanding technology themes, including AI infrastructure, robotics, digital twins and immersive computing.
The emphasis on deterministic AI also reflects growing industry discussions around reliability, explainability and regulatory compliance in artificial intelligence systems, particularly in mission-critical industries.
The planned joint venture structure may create opportunities for recurring software revenue, licensing income and profit-sharing arrangements if the partnership successfully commercializes consumer and enterprise applications.
At the same time, investors may view the announcement cautiously given the early-stage nature of many AI commercialization efforts and the complexity involved in scaling advanced infrastructure technologies globally.
The company’s ambitions across multiple sectors — including robotics, defense, immersive technology and AI infrastructure — may also increase execution risk and capital requirements over time.
Penny Stocks 2.0
2月前
NovaCore Labs powers digital transformation across the Caribbean through immersive technology, AI systems, and smart infrastructure. As a certified Google Partner, the Company delivers future-ready solutions for governments, institutions, and enterprises seeking modernization. NovaCore's technologies include emergency service simulators, AI dashboards, digital twins, and geospatial mapping tools—built for clarity, scalability, and impact. Its core divisions—CoreIntelligence, CoreImmersion, and CoreExperience—drive national innovation across training, cultural engagement, and data-driven decision-making. Clients include ministries, municipal agencies, universities, national security forces, and event organizers. With dozens of completed projects and active regional partnerships, NovaCore Labs is helping shape the digital future of the Caribbean.
For more information on NovaCore Labs, visit www.novacorelabs.com
Penny Stocks 2.0
2月前
$AIBT will be huge Solid Acquisition brings $5m to $10m Reveune »» Google Partner NovaCore Labs and AIBotics Advance Acquisition and Expand Robot Deployment Across JamaicaAIBotics - GlobeNewswire - Thu Apr 30, 8:00AM CDTMIAMI and KINGSTON, Jamaica, April 30, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- AIBotics, Inc. (OTC: AIBT) (“AIBotics” or the “Company”), a global operator deploying AI-enabled robotics and intelligent automation solutions through strategic partnerships across international markets, today provided an update on its planned acquisition of NovaCore Labs, a Jamaica-based Google Partner, highlighting active robotics deployments and accelerating commercial traction ahead of an anticipated closing in the second quarter.
The transaction, previously announced under a Letter of Intent, is progressing as planned and is expected to establish AIBotics with an operational platform in the Caribbean, anchored by NovaCore’s existing enterprise relationships, digital infrastructure capabilities and now active robotics deployments in real-world commercial environments.
NovaCore has moved decisively from concept to real-world deployment, distinguishing itself from many early-stage robotics initiatives. Its systems are already operating in live environments across Jamaica, with a pilot program underway at one of the country’s largest supermarket operators and autonomous cleaning robots being tested across two major hotel chains. These deployments mark a critical transition beyond simple demonstrations, validating robotics solutions in high-traffic, revenue-generating settings within the retail and hospitality sectors. For AIBotics, this progress transforms the opportunity from future potential into active, present-day execution.
NovaCore Labs represents a strategically important platform for AIBotics, combining Google Cloud and geospatial expertise with immersive technology capabilities and established relationships across enterprise and government sectors. The company has played a leading role in Jamaica’s digital transformation, notably through launching the country’s Google Street View mapping initiative, which significantly enhanced digital visibility for businesses and tourism infrastructure.
NovaCore maintains strong partnerships with leading academic institutions, including the University of Technology and the University of the West Indies, supporting workforce development, applied AI research and digital infrastructure expansion, key pillars of AIBotics’ long-term platform strategy.
The planned acquisition of NovaCore is a key pillar of AIBotics’ “build, deploy, scale” strategy, aimed at establishing international operating footholds in high-growth markets while accelerating the real-world deployment of AI and robotics technologies. From this foundation, the company intends to scale its solutions across multiple sectors, including hospitality, retail, healthcare and public infrastructure. Jamaica and the broader CARICOM region provide a compelling entry point, driven by strong tourism-based demand, active government-led digital transformation initiatives and a growing openness to automation and smart infrastructure.
AIBotics expects to complete the acquisition in the second quarter, subject to customary closing conditions.
Upon closing, the Company intends to:
Expand existing robotics deploymentsIntroduce additional AI-enabled service platformsLeverage NovaCore’s infrastructure to scale across the Caribbean
“This is an execution story,” said Ben Kaplan, Chief Executive Officer of AIBotics. “NovaCore is already deploying robotics in real-world environments from supermarkets to major hotel operators. This deployment strategy demonstrates demand, validates use cases and provides a foundation we can build on immediately following closing.”
Mr. Kaplan continued, “Our focus is to take what is already working, expand it and scale it across the region. We believe this acquisition positions AIBotics to participate directly in the global shift toward automation and intelligent infrastructure.”
The global adoption of robotics and AI-driven automation is accelerating, particularly in sectors challenged by labor shortages, rising operating costs and increasing demands for efficiency and enhanced customer experience. By integrating NovaCore’s local infrastructure and market presence with AIBotics’ robotics and AI capabilities, the Company is strategically positioning itself as an early mover in deploying applied automation solutions across emerging international markets.
About AIBotics
AIBotics, Inc. is a global operator deploying AI-enabled robotics and intelligent automation solutions through strategic partnerships across international markets. The Company focuses on real-world execution by introducing proven robotics systems into commercial environments where demand is accelerating and competition from large-scale developers remains limited.
AIBotics intends to identify, implement, and expand solutions that automate everyday business operations in hospitality, healthcare, commercial real estate, and public infrastructure.
Through a scalable, partnership-driven model, AIBotics is building a global robotics deployment platform, expanding across high-growth, often underserved markets and establishing a repeatable framework for international scale.
AIBotics is not building robots; it is putting them to work.
For more information on AIBotics, visit www.aibotics.ai
About NovaCore Labs
NovaCore Labs powers digital transformation across the Caribbean through immersive technology, AI systems, and smart infrastructure. As a certified Google Partner, the Company delivers future-ready solutions for governments, institutions, and enterprises seeking modernization. NovaCore's technologies include emergency service simulators, AI dashboards, digital twins, and geospatial mapping tools—built for clarity, scalability, and impact. Its core divisions—CoreIntelligence, CoreImmersion, and CoreExperience—drive national innovation across training, cultural engagement, and data-driven decision-making. Clients include ministries, municipal agencies, universities, national security forces, and event organizers. With dozens of completed projects and active regional partnerships, NovaCore Labs is helping shape the digital future of the Caribbean.
For more information on NovaCore Labs, visit www.novacorelabs.com
na na
2月前
The robotics IP inside Aibotics, Inc. is more credible than the average OTC “AI pivot” shell, but it still sits in a very speculative category because commercialization evidence is thin and the company’s balance sheet is extremely weak.
What gives the IP some real-world value
The strongest part of the story is that the acquired assets are tied to identifiable physical products rather than vague “AI platform” claims.
Phill Robot
7
The Phill Robot appears to be a genuine consumer robotics concept with:
a patented foldable robotic arm,
defined mechanical specs (35-inch reach, 15-pound force),
a wellness use case that consumers already spend money on,
and an actual prototype/marketing footprint.
That matters because many OTC “AI robotics” companies never progress beyond PowerPoints or licensing announcements.
The massage/wellness robotics category itself is not absurd commercially. There is a growing market for:
home recovery tech,
wellness automation,
elder-care assistive robotics,
and AI-driven personalization.
The concept could plausibly fit:
luxury wellness,
physical therapy recovery,
gyms/spas,
hotel recovery suites,
or home-care environments.
The pilot program with a Miami fitness center is at least a sign they are trying to validate a real deployment pathway rather than remaining purely promotional.
Milkyway smart breast milk storage system
5
This may actually be the more commercially realistic asset.
Why:
It solves a concrete logistics problem.
Hospitals and NICUs already spend heavily on milk tracking/storage compliance.
Parents are willing to pay premium prices for infant-care convenience.
The rotating inventory concept is understandable and patentable.
But it likely requires:
manufacturing partnerships,
FDA/legal review depending on marketing claims,
refrigeration reliability certifications,
and a real distribution network.
That is expensive for a microcap with severe liquidity problems.
What weakens the commercial case
The core problem is execution capacity.
The company reported:
only $2,183 revenue in 2025,
$2.2M net loss,
major dilution,
and going concern risk.
That creates a classic OTC issue:
potentially real IP trapped inside an undercapitalized shell.
Hardware robotics is brutally capital intensive:
tooling,
manufacturing,
safety testing,
firmware maintenance,
warranty support,
inventory financing,
distribution,
customer support,
app ecosystem maintenance.
Even legitimate robotics startups routinely burn tens or hundreds of millions before scaling.
Aibotics does not currently resemble a company with that level of infrastructure.
Comparison to other OTC / microcap AI-robotics names
Compared with typical OTC AI shells
Aibotics is somewhat stronger than many OTC AI companies because it at least has:
identifiable products,
demonstrable hardware concepts,
patent claims,
and defined consumer categories.
A large percentage of OTC AI names are essentially:
reverse-merger shells,
dilution vehicles,
or press-release-driven “AI strategy” stories with no defensible tech.
Aibotics appears to have more substance than that baseline.
Compared with real robotics companies
Knightscope
6
Knightscope is a better benchmark for “real but struggling robotics commercialization.”
Differences:
Knightscope has deployed robots in real environments.
It has recurring operational experience.
It has actual robotics fleet management infrastructure.
It still struggles financially despite far greater maturity.
That comparison shows how difficult robotics commercialization is even for firms much further along than Aibotics.
Serve Robotics
6
Serve Robotics has:
real deployments,
enterprise partnerships,
substantial funding,
and stronger technical credibility.
Compared with Serve, Aibotics looks extremely early-stage.
ReWalk Robotics
6
ReWalk demonstrates the regulatory and commercialization burden of medical-adjacent robotics:
long sales cycles,
reimbursement challenges,
clinical validation,
manufacturing overhead.
If Aibotics ever tries to market therapeutic outcomes rather than “wellness,” regulatory complexity rises sharply.
Overall assessment
The IP probably has some legitimate value
Especially:
the robotic arm deployment system,
wellness robotics positioning,
and the milk-storage automation concept.
But current equity value likely depends far more on:
dilution structure,
financing survival,
promotional momentum,
and OTC speculation
than on proven robotics revenue.
The biggest risk is that the company never reaches:
scalable manufacturing,
dependable product support,
or meaningful distribution.
Most realistic upside scenario
The most believable bullish outcome is not becoming a major robotics manufacturer.
It is:
demonstrating a functioning niche product,
generating pilot deployments,
proving user engagement,
and eventually licensing or selling the IP to a larger wellness/appliance/robotics player.
That is a much more realistic path than competing directly with heavily funded robotics firms.
Bottom line
This is not pure vaporware in the way many OTC AI tickers are.
But it is also nowhere near a mature robotics company.
The IP has plausible niche commercial potential, especially in:
wellness robotics,
bedside assistive automation,
and infant-care logistics.
The limiting factor is not the idea itself — it is whether the company has enough capital, engineering depth, manufacturing capability, and operational discipline to survive long enough to commercialize it.