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  2. Automated guided vehicle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automated_guided_vehicle

    An automated guided vehicle (AGV), different from an autonomous mobile robot (AMR), is a portable robot that follows along marked long lines or wires on the floor, or uses radio waves, vision cameras, magnets, or lasers for navigation. They are most often used in industrial applications to transport heavy materials around a large industrial ...

  3. Vehicular automation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicular_automation

    An automated guided vehicle or automatic guided vehicle (AGV) is a mobile robot that follows markers or wires in the floor, or uses vision, magnets, or lasers for navigation. They are most often used in industrial applications to move materials around a manufacturing facility or warehouse.

  4. Motorized shopping cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorized_shopping_cart

    While shopping cart theft has also been a costly matter for retailers, the higher cost of the motorized carts makes their theft a greater issue to the store, and thereby leads stores to establish policies prohibiting the carts from exiting stores, even though a disabled person may have the need to bring the cart all the way to their vehicle.

  5. Caroline's Cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caroline's_Cart

    Caroline's Carts are designed to enable caretakers to push a larger disabled person while allowing room for loading the cart with groceries. Features include a forward facing seat with a five-point harness and extended handles to provide room for the person being pushed. [2] They have the capacity to hold a 250-pound occupant. [1]

  6. History of self-driving cars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_self-driving_cars

    An early depiction of automated guided cars was Norman Bel Geddes's Futurama exhibit sponsored by General Motors at the 1939 World's Fair, which showed radio-controlled electric cars propelled via electromagnetic fields provided by circuits embedded in the roadway.

  7. Mobile robot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_robot

    The Stanford Cart line follower was a mobile robot that was able to follow a white line, using a camera to see. It was radio linked to a large mainframe that made the calculations. [12] At about the same time (1966–1972) the Stanford Research Institute is building and doing research on Shakey the Robot, a robot named after its jerky motion.

  8. Category:Automated guideway transit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Automated_guide...

    Automated guideway transit (AGT) vehicles are a class of mass transit systems that are fully automated (no driver) in operation, and run on a light guideway as opposed to heavier railways or large tunnels. AGT systems aim to lower capital costs through their lighter construction, and operational costs due to lack of a driver.

  9. Melex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melex

    Vehicles from Mielec are highly popular in their class—so much so that electric carts from other companies are often referred to as "Melexes." Melex is a registered trademark. It was registered in two graphic versions by the Wytwórnia Sprzętu Komunikacyjnego "PZL-Mielec" and in one by the company "Melex A&D Tyszkiewicz."