The CE approval opens Europe for Cornerstone Robotics as the company expands its global surgical robotics business
Updated
May 29, 2026 4:20 AM

A tray of surgical tools. PHOTO: UNSPLASH
As surgical robotics companies expand beyond domestic markets, regulatory approvals are becoming a critical part of global growth. Companies are no longer competing only on hardware and clinical performance. They are also competing on their ability to enter tightly regulated healthcare systems and build long-term hospital partnerships.
Hong Kong-based Cornerstone Robotics is now moving further into that phase of expansion after its Sentire Endoscopic Surgical System received CE Mark certification under the European Union’s Medical Device Regulation framework.
The approval allows the company to commercialize the system across European markets for minimally invasive procedures in general surgery, gynecology, thoracic surgery and urology. For surgical robotics companies, regulatory approvals often represent more than product validation. They also determine market access, hospital adoption opportunities and long-term commercial scale.
Cornerstone Robotics has already been building clinical operations in the UK ahead of the approval. Since 2025, the company has worked with Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust on clinical investigations involving the Sentire Surgical System. According to the company, the system has been used across procedures involving urology, gynecology and gastrointestinal surgery. The company says the clinical investigation helped generate real-world data to support physician training, research and future adoption efforts.
Alongside the regulatory approval, Cornerstone Robotics is also expanding its local operations in Europe. The company established a UK subsidiary in 2025 and has been developing training, clinical support and after-sales service capabilities for hospitals using the system.
That operational buildout reflects a larger challenge inside surgical robotics. Hospitals adopting robotic systems often require ongoing clinical training, technical support and workflow integration alongside the hardware itself.
Cornerstone Robotics says its strategy centers around vertically integrated development across engineering, software, imaging and robotics systems. The company argues that this structure gives it greater control over product development, supply chain management and long-term operational stability.
Professor Samuel Au, Founder and CEO of Cornerstone Robotics, said: "Receiving CE Certification marks a major milestone in Cornerstone Robotics' evolution from a technology innovator to a global clinical solutions provider. From our first clinical investigation in Portsmouth, UK, to achieving European regulatory approval, each step of the journey reflects our commitment to proprietary innovation, product excellence, and clinical value. Looking ahead, we will continue expanding into key global markets and partnering with leading medical institutions to bring high-quality surgical robotic solutions to more physicians and patients worldwide."
The CE approval also comes several months after the company completed an oversubscribed financing round of approximately US$200 million in November 2025.
The funding and regulatory expansion together signal how surgical robotics companies are increasingly entering a more commercially focused stage of growth. Beyond research and development, companies are now investing more heavily in regulatory approvals, hospital partnerships, physician training and international operational infrastructure as competition expands across global healthcare markets.
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Rethinking 3D modelling for a world that generates too much, too quickly.
Updated
January 8, 2026 6:32 PM

A hologram in the franchise Star Wars, in Walt Disney World Resort, Orlando. PHOTO: UNSPLASH
MicroCloud Hologram Inc. (NASDAQ: HOLO), a technology service provider recognized for its holography and imaging systems, is now expanding into a more advanced realm: a quantum-driven 3D intelligent model. The goal is to generate detailed 3D models and images with far less manual effort — a need that has only grown as industries flood the world with more visual data every year.
The concept is straightforward, even if the technology behind it isn’t. Traditional 3D modeling workflows are slow, fragmented and depend on large teams to clean datasets, train models, adjust parameters and fine-tune every output. HOLO is trying to close that gap by combining quantum computing with AI-powered 3D modeling, enabling the system to process massive datasets quickly and automatically produce high-precision 3D assets with much less human involvement.
To achieve this, the company developed a distributed architecture comprising of several specialized subsystems. One subsystem collects and cleans raw visual data from different sources. Another uses quantum deep learning to understand patterns in that data. A third converts the trained model into ready-to-use 3D assets based on user inputs. Additional modules manage visualization, secure data storage and system-wide protection — all supported by quantum-level encryption. Each subsystem runs in its own container and communicates through encrypted interfaces, allowing flexible upgrades and scaling without disrupting the entire system.
Why this matters: Industries ranging from gaming and film to manufacturing, simulation and digital twins are rapidly increasing their reliance on 3D content. The real bottleneck isn’t creativity — it’s time. Producing accurate, high-quality 3D assets still requires a huge amount of manual processing. HOLO’s approach attempts to lighten that workload by utilizing quantum tools to speed up data processing, model training, generation and scaling, while keeping user data secure.
According to the company, the system’s biggest advantages include its ability to handle massive datasets more efficiently, generate precise 3D models with fewer manual steps, and scale easily thanks to its modular, quantum-optimized design. Whether quantum computing will become a mainstream part of 3D production remains an open question. Still, the model shows how companies are beginning to rethink traditional 3D workflows as demand for high-quality digital content continues to surge.