TOKYO — Toyota, a top sponsor of next year's Summer Olympics in Tokyo, wants to roll out a fleet of high-tech robots for the games that will take visitors to their seats, distribute drinks, return thrown javelins from the field or even act as virtual immersive avatars for people unable to attend.
But this month's preview of the first wave of gadgetry indicates that it's still a work in progress.
Robotics and artificial intelligence have emerged as top priorities for Toyota Motor Corp. as President Akio Toyoda races to transform Japan's biggest car maker into a mobility purveyor. Toyota has invested billions of dollars into the effort.
But as the countdown to the Olympics enters its final year, Toyota's engineers concede they are unsure how all the gizmos on tap will even be used.
Consider the newly developed T-TR1. The remote-location communication robot resembles an oversized upright vacuum cleaner with a tall vertical display screen where the dust bag would be.