

JakubZygarlicki
On 13 November, in New York’s Tribeca district, at the Spring Studios venue, IFS hosted Industrial X Unleashed – a one-day event that set out to define a new standard for so-called Industrial AI, that is, artificial intelligence designed not for offices, but for factories, power grids, and critical infrastructure.
For me, the trip was special for another reason as well. It was the first time that myERP.global appeared at such a large event abroad, and I was representing us in New York on my own. The very sight of Spring Studios filled with partners, customers, and IFS teams was truly impressive. The scale of the event, the polished visual design, and the very well thought-out agenda made it clear from the outset that this was not just another AI conference, but a showcase of real implementations and the direction in which industry is heading.
On stage we saw representatives of Anthropic, Boston Dynamics, Microsoft, PwC, Siemens, as well as many customers from industries such as energy, manufacturing, aviation, and telecommunications. The organizer, IFS – a provider of Industrial AI-class software – promised not yet another AI show, but concrete, working implementations. From the perspective of someone who talks every day with companies implementing ERP systems and AI solutions, that was exactly what I wanted to see there.
The IFS Industrial X Unleashed conference opened with a keynote from Mark Moffat, CEO of IFS. He outlined a vision in which the real return on investment in AI is not created in presentations, but on production lines, in transmission networks, and out in the field. That is where around 70 percent of the global workforce is employed, not in office open spaces. Listening to this from the audience in New York, I felt it resonated strongly with what we hear from our partners and customers in Poland: AI only makes sense when it touches real processes, not just slides and prototypes.

Image credit: IFS / IFS Industrial X Unleashed 2025
At the center of this vision is IFS.ai, a platform intended to act as an operating system for industry, bringing together people, digital agents, and robots in a single flow of data and decisions. In IFS’s own language, it is a journey from signal to action: data from sensors or cameras, analysis by AI agents, and then an immediate decision and work order for technicians, robots, or both at once. Looking at this from the perspective of the market we describe on myERP.global, it is clear that precisely this coherence between the IT layer, the OT layer, and the physical world will, in the coming years, distinguish the most advanced companies.
One of the most talked-about announcements was the strategic partnership between IFS Nexus Black and Anthropic, the creator of the Claude models. The result of this partnership is Resolve, a new class of Industrial AI tool that goes directly into the hands of technicians and maintenance staff.

Image credit: IFS / IFS Industrial X Unleashed 2025
From my point of view, this is a very important direction. In conversations with manufacturing and service companies, I often hear that the biggest challenge is no longer analytics itself, but delivering the right guidance at the right moment to the person who is physically at the machine or installation. And this is precisely where Resolve makes a difference.
The tool can analyse many different types of data at once: video from a technician’s phone, audio recordings, temperature and pressure readings, or complex installation schematics. On this basis it predicts failures, recommends spare parts, optimises work schedules, and automatically documents completed tasks, including through speech recognition and transcription of voice reports.
On stage, they showed, among others, the example of Scottish distillery William Grant & Sons, the producer of Grant’s whisky and Hendrick’s gin. Before Resolve was implemented, as many as around 38 percent of repairs were emergency in nature. Today, thanks to failure prediction and better planning, the plant has significantly reduced unplanned downtime, and the annual financial benefits are estimated at around 8.4 million pounds. Listening to this story, I thought that we would soon see similar case studies in the Polish market, especially among companies that are already investing in predictive maintenance.
Kriti Sharma, head of Nexus Black, stressed from the stage that in industries where “sometimes a human life is at stake”, the priority must be not only the power of the model, but also the safety and responsibility of AI. This is exactly what Anthropic is expected to bring to the IFS ecosystem, alongside purely technological capabilities. The theme of responsible AI implementation ran throughout the event and, for me, was one of the most important signals for the market.
Another pillar of IFS Industrial X Unleashed was physical AI – the combination of AI agents with robots. IFS announced a partnership with Boston Dynamics, the global leader in mobile robotics.

Image credit: IFS / IFS Industrial X Unleashed 2025
This was the moment that personally impressed me the most. The live demo with the Spot robot showed very tangibly how far we have come from a world where industrial robotics are discussed only on slides. Spot, a four-legged platform capable of moving autonomously around facilities, was presented as an extension of the IFS.ai system.
The robot can perform autonomous inspections: using thermal cameras it detects overheating equipment, listens for leaks, reads analogue gauges, checks indicator lights, and identifies spilled substances or voltage anomalies. The collected data is sent instantly to IFS.ai, where agentic AI analyses it, assesses the risk and, if necessary, automatically generates a service order or triggers preventive action.
Sitting in the audience and watching the robot move freely across the stage, I had a very strong sense that this is no longer a vision of the future, but a real tool that we will soon see in power plants, refineries, and factories also in our part of the world.

Image credit: IFS / IFS Industrial X Unleashed 2025
The joint solution from IFS and Boston Dynamics is primarily intended to improve safety by reducing human presence in hazardous zones, increase efficiency through faster decision-making, and boost the availability of critical assets through a predictive approach to failures. Target customers include, among others, the energy sector, mining, manufacturing plants, and operators of critical infrastructure.
While Spot showed how far mobile robotics is already able to take work off people’s shoulders, the partnership with 1X Technologies touched on a vision of the future in which humanoid workers operate side by side with humans.
IFS and 1X announced a strategic collaboration under which the humanoid NEO is to be introduced into industrial environments as a robotic worker managed directly from IFS.ai.
The joint concept assumes that in the coming years, the size of the industrial workforce will be measured not only in human full-time employees, but also in the number of AI agents and robots. Plants that today struggle to operate with 300 people are ultimately expected to rely on an ecosystem of as many as 3,000 “workers”: human experts, digital agents, and humanoids performing physical tasks, including in hazardous or hard-to-reach environments.
Looking at this from the perspective of the conversations we have in Poland, it is clear that this direction will spark both great interest and questions around skills, safety, and responsibility. Industrial X Unleashed, however, showed that the discussion is no longer taking place only in laboratories, but increasingly on real factory floors.
The joint pilot programme is set to involve selected companies from sectors such as manufacturing, energy, and aviation. Commercial availability of solutions based on humanoids is planned for 2026.
Another highlight for participants of IFS Industrial X Unleashed was the collaboration with Siemens, focused on transforming power grids.
IFS and Siemens will combine their strengths: on the one hand Gridscale X and Siemens’s experience in network and infrastructure planning, and on the other IFS.ai and solutions for asset management, investment planning, and field service operations.
The goal is to create a pathway to an autonomous grid capable of independently balancing the growing share of renewables, managing ageing infrastructure, and responding to increasingly frequent weather extremes. The integrated platform is intended to connect the engineering perspective with the business and financial perspective, and to translate long-term investment decisions into concrete work orders for field teams.
What has been emphasised is that the solution is to be modular and ready for cloud deployments without the need to rip and replace existing systems. From my point of view, this is also an important signal for companies in Poland that would like to benefit from modern solutions but are not ready to completely overhaul their system landscape. The collaboration is expected to benefit not only grid operators, but also energy producers, large industrial plants, and other organisations that depend on reliable infrastructure.
Beyond the partnership announcements themselves, Industrial X Unleashed also served as a stage for the broader ecosystem of advisors and integrators. Speakers included representatives of PwC, Accenture, Deloitte, Microsoft, MIT CISR, and Siemens Grid Software, among others.
From a participant’s perspective, it was very clear that without cooperation between technology vendors, consultants, and integrators, it will be difficult to talk about real industrial transformation. Presentations frequently addressed topics related to infrastructure, data management, regulations, and, in particular, the massive need to reskill the workforce.
On the IndustrialX.ai website, the organizer summarises the event format as a combination of product launches, “AI in action” demos, and strategic discussions about the future of work in industry. The programme was dominated by themes such as agentic AI, robotics, and physical AI, but the resilience of supply chains, infrastructure modernisation, and responsible deployment of new technologies were also recurring topics.
As a participant, I had the impression that these three elements – product, demo, and strategy – were indeed well balanced. On the one hand, you could see concrete solutions in action; on the other, there was still room for broader reflection on how the labour market and business models will change.
Judging by the scale of the partnerships and scenarios presented, Industrial X Unleashed was more than just a product conference. IFS is trying to position itself as a trusted category leader for Industrial AI, a platform through which, in the coming years, not only data from sensors and robots will flow, but also decisions around maintenance, investment planning, and workplace safety.

Image credit: IFS / IFS Industrial X Unleashed 2025
The joint projects with Anthropic, Boston Dynamics, 1X Technologies, and Siemens show that the company’s ambition is not merely to deliver yet another ERP system or AI module, but to truly connect the physical and digital layers – from a humanoid on the shop floor to an investment plan for the power grid.
For me personally, the trip to New York confirmed that the direction we are taking with myERP.global is the right one. More and more conversations about ERP systems, maintenance, and asset management will take place in the context of AI agents, robotics, and physical AI. Above all, IFS Industrial X Unleashed was a demonstration of one rather bold assumption: that the future of industry will be built not by individual tools, but by tightly integrated ecosystems of people, AI agents, and robots. And we want to stay close to these changes and continue to report on them for our communities – both in Poland and abroad.