Manufacturing Matters Podcast

Manufacturing Matters Podcast

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06/19/2026

"Every B***o turns on with 12 eyes … and if one robot makes a mistake in a train depot yard in Australia, or an airport in South America, or doing vegetation management alongside a road in Pennsylvania, the entire fleet learns from that lesson.”

For years, autonomous robots largely stayed indoors, confined to the predictable aisles of warehouses and factories. Leveraging his experience growing up working on a farm, B***o Co-Founder and CEO Charlie Andersen sought to develop rugged autonomous robots that work safely and effectively alongside people in the messy, ever-changing conditions of the great outdoors.

In this episode of Manufacturing Matters, TECH B2B Marketing’s Jimmy Carroll sits down with Andersen and B***o marketing coordinator Shelby Allen to explore how the company went from “three guys and a dog named Meg” working out of an unheated barn to a fleet of roughly 750 robots that haul, tow, mow, spray, and patrol across agricultural and industrial sites worldwide.

The conversation covers why building autonomy that works near people outdoors is far harder than automating big machines or indoor warehouses, and how “physical AI” adds a crucial third leg — training data — to the traditional hardware-and-software stack. Andersen explains how a larger fleet means more “eyes on the world,” compounding learning across every unit, and why the company’s surprising surge of industrial demand (now roughly a third of its fleet) prompted its first appearance at Automate 2026. Additional topics include the B***o Grande 44, the “Swiss cheese” model of safety, the role of large language models and voice commands on mobile robots, user privacy and data sovereignty, and why Andersen believes the U.S. has a major opportunity to lead as physical AI meets outdoor work.

Link to the full episode in the comments.

06/12/2026

“Computational design and 3D printing go together like peanut butter and chocolate.”

For most of its history, 3D printing was considered speculative, risky, even fringe. Today, says Eric Utley, 3D printing applications engineering manager at Protolabs, it’s boring, and that’s exactly the point.

In this episode of Manufacturing Matters, TECH B2B Marketing’s Jimmy Carroll sits down with Utley, a 16-year veteran of the additive manufacturing industry, to explore how 3D printing has quietly evolved from a rapid prototyping curiosity into mainstream production technology, and where it’s headed next.

The conversation covers how Fortune 500 companies like GE and HP helped shift additive manufacturing toward end-use production, why the explosion of application-specific materials is one of the clearest signs of the industry’s maturation, and how customers are increasingly designing parts specifically for 3D printing rather than as a stepping stone to other processes. Additional topics include the growing role of AI and computational design, how hobbyists are quietly driving innovation, and why algorithmic-based design processes paired with digital manufacturing are creating new opportunities.

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