Skip to main content
Logo GMV

Main navigation

  • Sectors
    • Icono espacio
      Space
    • Icono Aeronáutica
      Aeronautics
    • Icono Defensa y Seguridad
      Defense and Security
    • Icono Sistemas Inteligentes de Transporte
      Intelligent Transportation Systems
    • Icono Automoción
      Automotive
    • Icono Ciberseguridad
      Cybersecurity
    • Icono Servicios públicos Digitales
      Digital Public Services
    • Icono Sanidad
      Healthcare
    • Icono Industria
      Industry
    • Icono Financiero
      Financial
    • Icono Industria
      Services
    • All Sectors

    Highlight

    uPathWay
    When robots learn to speak the same language: The new era of industrial interoperability
  • Talent
  • About GMV
    • Get to Know the Company
    • History
    • Management Team
    • Certifications
    • Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Communication
    • News
    • Events
    • Blog
    • Magazine GMV News
    • Press Room
    • Media library
    • Latest from GMV

Secondary navigation

  • Products A-Z
  • GMV Global
    • Global (en)
    • Spain and LATAM (es - ca - en)
    • Germany (de - en)
    • Portugal (pt - en)
    • Poland (pl - en)
    • All branches and all GMV sites
  • Home
Back
New search
Date
Blog
  • Automation

When robots learn to speak the same language: The new era of industrial interoperability

02/12/2025
  • Print
Share
uPathWay

Quadruped robot managed through uPathWay during industrial inspection tasks

 Comparison of uPathWay vs. other traditional platforms

For years, industrial robotics evolved in closed environments: each manufacturer developed its own languages, architectures, and control protocols. This approach, while enabling significant advances in automation, created a structural problem—fragmentation—that limits scalability and makes it difficult to integrate heterogeneous equipment within the same plant or production line.

Today, that reality is changing. Robotics is no longer a promise; it has become an essential component of daily operations in factories, logistics environments, and energy facilities. However, the rapid growth of robots and autonomous vehicles has brought a new challenge: interoperability.

In ecosystems where equipment from different manufacturers must work side by side, each with its own software, interface, and communication system, companies face increasing complexity when coordinating tasks, exchanging data, or ensuring operational safety. The lack of a common language among robots from different suppliers forces organizations to deploy partial or vendor-dependent solutions, with high integration and maintenance costs.

Toward a common language for robots

As the sector matures, open standards that promote cooperation among systems are gaining ground. Frameworks like Open-RMF, driven by the Open Source Robotics Foundation, and VDA5050, developed by the German Association of the Automotive Industry, are laying the foundations for different types of robots to share information, plan joint routes, and execute missions in a coordinated, safe way.

Added to this is the integration of 5G, which enables true convergence between the IT and OT worlds. This low-latency, high-reliability connection opens the door to real-time monitoring and control, an essential requirement for critical industrial environments.

The intelligent orchestration layer

In this context, a need has emerged for an orchestration layer that acts as a bridge between technologies, manufacturers, and systems. This is where solutions like uPathWay become especially relevant, offering an approach centered on robotic interoperability.

uPathWay makes it possible to manage and monitor mixed fleets from a single platform, serving as a unifying core that integrates robots and autonomous vehicles from different manufacturers. Its open architecture streamlines mission planning, task coordination, and remote supervision through advanced AI-driven tools designed to optimize routes, detect anomalies, and analyze performance in real time.

Operator remotely managing autonomous robots in a refinery using the uPathWay platform.

AI-driven robots: The ideal teammates

The combination of robotics and artificial intelligence is transforming how we understand automation. Robots are no longer limited to repetitive tasks: they are now intelligent agents capable of collaborating, learning from their surroundings, and operating autonomously in complex or high-risk environments.

From inspecting photovoltaic plants to overseeing offshore platforms or monitoring production lines, interoperability is what allows all these systems to work together in a coordinated, efficient, and safe way.

We are therefore entering a stage of technological maturity in which robotics is no longer measured solely in terms of hardware, but in terms of connectivity, collaboration, and shared intelligence. Interoperability will be the key to unlocking its full potential and building factories, plants, and industrial environments that are truly autonomous and resilient.

 

 

Author: Eric Polvorosa

  • Print
Share

Comments

About text formats

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
CAPTCHA

Related

No results

Contact

Contact menu

  • Contact
  • GMV around the world

Blog

  • Blog

Sectors

Sectors menu

  • Space
  • Aeronautics
  • Defense and Security
  • Intelligent Transportation Systems
  • Automotive
  • Cybersecurity
  • Digital Public Services
  • Healthcare
  • Industry
  • Financial
  • Services
  • Talent
  • About GMV
  • Shortcut to
    • Press Room
    • News
    • Events
    • Blog
    • Products A-Z
© 2025, GMV Innovating Solutions S.L.

Footer menu

  • Contact
  • Legal Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Footer Info

  • Commitment to the Environment
  • Financial Information