
Initial Deployments & Future Expansion
Modulr’s Adoption Strategy
Modulr’s adoption strategy rests on three core principles:
Prioritize near-term applications: Focus on robotics use cases with immediate utility and revenue potential, rather than purely theoretical concepts.
Diversify target markets: Engage commercial, consumer, and academic sectors to build a broad user base.
Future-proof the platform: Ensure the decentralized Operating System (deOS) can expand beyond robotics, becoming the default proof-of-utility chain for the entire robotics-enabled economy.
Initial Use Cases:
Commercial Robotics Routines Marketplace: Developers can tokenize and monetize robotics routines, trading them with businesses seeking pre-built, effective solutions.
Remote Campus Humanoid Explorers: Tele-operated humanoid robots allow prospective students to tour campuses remotely, cutting travel costs, improving accessibility, and generating recurring revenue for Modulr and partner universities.
Construction & Demolition RaaS Swarms: Fleets of modular robots are delivered on a pay-as-you-go Robotics-as-a-Service basis, enabling contractors to scale automation without owning or maintaining heavy equipment.
University Robotics Sharing Network: Smaller universities can lease time on advanced robotics hardware hosted at better-equipped campuses, gaining access to cutting-edge systems while host universities earn rental revenue and Modulr collects network fees.
Tele-Robotics Work Platform: Skilled operators can control drones, warehouse bots, or inspection devices remotely via Modulr’s low-latency streaming, reducing on-site labor and travel costs while generating valuable data for automation training.
Real-World Robotics Gaming & Learning Hub: Consumers and students pilot Modulr-connected robots in competitive or educational settings, creating a mass-market engagement channel.
These use cases address immediate revenue opportunities while embedding Modulr into multiple verticals, laying the foundation for a modular services industry that will support the broader robotics-enabled economy.
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