Even on Independence Day, the world of exoskeletons, exosuits, and wearable robotics for enhanced mobility doesn’t rest. This is the archive page for the relevant news from June 26 – July 4, 2026 (week 27). If something was missed, please don’t hesitate to contact us, and always share news stories and press releases directly.
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Hypershell X Series Receives TÜV Rheinland Verification
Hypershell’s new X Series consumer exoskeletons, including the Pro S, Max S, and Ultra S, have received a TÜV Rheinland verification statement focused on assistance response time and human-machine synchronization. The company says the updated system can respond in as little as 0.31 seconds and reach 97.5% gait synchronization across varied terrain, signaling another step toward more natural-feeling consumer exoskeleton assistance for hiking, trekking, and long days on foot. Read the Press Release on PR.com
CUKTECH Teases a Powered Hip Exoskeleton
The mobile battery brand CUKTECH announced on Instagram that it has entered a collaboration with CETC Robotics to make its own powered hip exoskeleton which will utilize their battery packs.
Mashable Highlights the Dephy Sidekick
The popular website has published a short but focused video on the powered ankle exoskeleton giving the industry more teach-media exposure. Mashable.com
HeroWear is entering its next phase of growth with Joel Edwards joining the company as CEO.Â
“HeroWear’s technical and scientific leadership remains unchanged. Co-founders and continue as Chief Technology Officer and Chief Scientific Officer, ensuring the innovation engine that powers Apex 2 stays at full throttle.” – see LinkedIn
ExoIQ reports on 6-moths of use of the S700 for boat restoration
The S700 has been in use at Wegener Jachtwerft for around six months –Â with clearly positive feedback. Jannes clearly describes the difference: while muscle soreness and exhaustion used to be the norm after a workday, the work is now much more comfortable thanks to the exoskeleton. – see pictures and video on ExoIQ.com
Call for Extended Abstracts – BioRob 2026 WorkshopÂ
Extended Submission Deadline: July 7, 2026, 11:59 PM PT
“Bridging Human Locomotion Neuromechanics and Assistive Robotics” – Topics include locomotion & balance, neuromusculoskeletal modeling, wearable robotics and prosthetics, human-robot interaction, robot assisted rehabilitation and more! see LinkedIn
The exoskeleton that’s helping Seattle Mountain Rescue move “better, faster, safer”
“this is a tool in the toolset” – KNOW by the NPR network drove out to North Bend to see exactly how this gear works. Guest: Wes Cooper, an Emerging Technologies Director at Seattle Mountain Rescue.  Easy listen via YouTube
Cyberdyne Launches a Silicon Valley Robotics Investment Push
Cyberdyne,  is looking to connect more directly with Silicon Valley’s physical AI ecosystem through a Â¥10 billion corporate venture capital fund with Pegasus Tech Ventures, Cyberdyne plans to back robotics, healthcare, automation, humanoid, and intelligent-systems startups, with partnership opportunities tied to potential investment… link to Automate.com
Hangmo Technology Raises Nearly RMB 100 Million in Angel Round
Hangmo Robot Co., Ltd., maker of the IRMO M1 vision-enabled knee consumer exoskeleton appears to be supplementing it’s successful Kickstarter.com campaign with an additional ~$14m investment from Zhongtou Wanfang, Sanxian Technology, Beihang Tianhui, Chengmei Capital, Sanhe Investment and Changzhou Jinkong according to Binance Square.
Teaching Exoskeleton Technology to Medical Students
Auxivo’s case study from ETH Zurich focuses on bringing exoskeleton technology into medical education. Teaching medical students how exoskeletons work is a practical step toward closing the gap between engineering innovation and clinical use. A total of 99 students participated with the help of six to eight teaching assistants and 24 EduExo Pros were used in the course, split over 24 groups of 4 to 5 students each. Read more on Auxivo.com
Flying with an Exoskeleton: The Real Challenges of Airplane Travel
In Beyond The Skin, Bill Billotte, Matt Dickinson, and Nora Elizabeth dive into one of the most practical (and overlooked) questions in human augmentation: What’s it actually like to travel by airplane while wearing an exoskeleton? – YouTube
Plus jobs and events (see the visual form). See you all next week!







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