ENCY Software and Stäubli Robotics partner to simplify robot programming ENCY Software Ltd. partnered with Stäubli International AG to integrate its ENCY Robot software with Stäubli's industrial robots, aiming to simplify robot programming for tasks like milling and polishing. The collaboration addresses the challenge of converting CAD/CAM trajectories into reliable robotic processes, reducing complexity for manufacturers. Turning complex CAD/CAM trajectories into reliable, easy-to-control robotic processes is a challenge for tasks such as milling, grinding, cutting, deburring, polishing, and laser processing, according to ENCY Software Ltd. The company yesterday announced that its ENCY Robot software will work with Stäubli International AG’s industrial robots. “Manufacturers do not need another layer of complexity,” stated Andrei Kharatsidi, CEO of ENCY Software. “They need a clear path from digital preparation to real robot motion. Together with Stäubli, we are making advanced robot programming more practical and predictable through ENCY Robot.” Founded in 2024, ENCY Software claimed that its platform unifies traditional and AI-driven computer-aided design https://www.therobotreport.com/tag/cad/ and manufacturing with offline and real-time robot programming, NC code verification, and cloud collaboration. With ENCY Robot https://encycam.com/ency-robot/ , users can program robots offline, simulate processes, check collisions and singularities, and reduce robot downtime during programming, said the Limassol, Cyprus-based company https://encycam.com/ . Stäubli provides hardware foundation ENCY Software announced the partnership at ENCY World Conference 2026 https://encycam.com/news/ency-world-conference-2026/ , where Stäubli Robotics joined it and CNC Solutions to discuss tighter integration between robot hardware and digital manufacturing https://www.therobotreport.com/category/markets-industries/manufacturing/ tools. Stäubli said it provides the robot hardware foundation for demanding production environments, including accurate and rigid robots designed for reliable trajectory execution. “Advanced robotics needs programming tools that are powerful, but also practical for real production,” said Andrea Tagliabue, global leader of application experts for general industry at Stäubli Robotics. “By combining Stäubli robot performance with ENCY’s offline programming and simulation capabilities, manufacturers and integrators can move more confidently from digital preparation to production.” Stäubli Robotics https://www.staubli.com/global/en/home.html is a global provider of industrial robots for demanding applications across manufacturing, automotive https://www.therobotreport.com/category/markets-industries/manufacturing/automotive , medical https://www.therobotreport.com/tag/medical , food https://www.therobotreport.com/tag/food/ , pharmaceutical https://www.therobotreport.com/tag/food/ , logistics https://www.therobotreport.com/category/markets-industries/logistics-warehousing-asrs/ , and metalworking industries. The company https://www.therobotreport.com/tag/staubli/ is part of the Stäubli Group, a global mechatronics solution provider headquartered in Switzerland. “The agreement reflects a shared direction: making advanced robotic applications easier to program, easier to deploy, and easier to repeat,” said ENCY. ENCY updates design and control software Last week, ENCY Software released https://encycam.com/news/ency-2-9/ Version 2.8 of its ENCY CAD/CAM system and ENCY Robot. The company has added data to machining reports and operation statistics, enhanced workflows, fixed bugs, and clarified license administration. In April, ENCY updated https://encycam.com/news/ency-hyper-gets-a-major-update/ its ENCY Hyper system, which combines offline programming with live work in a single workflow. It supports robots from numerous providers, including Stäubli, ABB Robotics, DENSO, Doosan Robotics, Epson Robots, FANUC, Kawasaki, KUKA, OMRON, Techman, Universal Robots, and Yaskawa. ENCY Robot also enabled https://encycam.com/cases/ency-powers-robotic-fabrication-of-public-sculptures artist Volkan Alkanoglu to design and fabricate the challenging form of the INFINITY public sculpture, which was installed in in May in Pompano Beach, Fla.