When industrial robotics were originally conceived, they were designed to use
  hydraulic actuators and vacuum tubes. While functional, the applications for
  these robots were limited. As technology progressed, the use of hydraulics
  eventually gave way to faster and more precise electric servo motors.
  Similarly, vacuum tubes were replaced by transistors and microcomputers. And
  the various devices used to record the robot’s physical position have evolved
  into resolvers and encoders.
As various robot manufacturers ramped up production, improvements to speed,
  precision and reliability continued to ramp up as well. Lighter and more rigid
  castings were used. These, along with higher precision gear boxes and servo
  motors, have allowed robots to continue to shrink in size, handle larger
  payloads and have a smaller footprint on the manufacturing floor. Applications
  where hard automation used to be the only solution now have robotic solutions.
For instance, in the automotive industry, hard automation was used exclusively
  to move parts of the vehicle or the entire vehicle from one line to another or
  from one station to another. Now, robots can lift the entire vehicle and
  reposition it as needed. This solution is considerably more cost effective
  than hard automation and very easy to adapt to model changes or multiple
  models on the same production line.
All of these robotic advancements help increase productivity, decrease cost of
  ownership and reduce capital expense while also improving the useful life of
  the machine. With these technological advancements, the industrial robot is
  quickly becoming commonplace in manufacturing. These advancements are not
  limited to the industrial environment. Manufacturers have developed humanoid
  robots that can run, jump and even help in a variety of surgical settings.
Each of these diverse application areas are being absorbed as a whole across
  the automation discipline. It’s these various advancements that have allowed
  manufacturers to mount a laser to a robot and perform welding or cutting with
  extreme precision and versatility.
Laser Advances
Lasers have also evolved in many ways from their early beginnings. The power
  range of lasers started from less than 1 W back in the 1960s to being pushed
  to 2 trillion W today. The newer fiber lasers have made a huge impact by
  reducing cost and size while also improving beam quality, reliability and
  efficiency.
By using beam splitters, a single laser generator can be used for both cutting
  and welding. Beam splitters allow a single generator to use different fiber
  delivery sizes to optimize the process for different materials or material
  thicknesses. Previously, these processes may have required dedicated hardware
  for each.
Also, advancements in optical heads and optical fibers have made it more
  possible than ever to apply a robotic arm.
Along with the advancements in laser hardware are some equally impressive
  features in software. For instance, greater control over the power output and
  varying the available power across a larger range are now possible. The output
  can also be pulsed and the power, duration and frequency of the pulses can be
  varied. In welding applications, this allows better control of the penetration
  depth and profile and minimizes the surrounding heat-affected zone, making for
  a higher quality weld. All of these parameters cannot only be controlled by
  the robot, but can also be monitored by the robot for process and quality
  control.
The robot also has the ability to directly couple the output power of the
  laser to the travel speed of the tool center point. This allows for a higher
  quality weld or cut when processing across curved surfaces or across multiple
  planes of surfaces with a continuous and consistent-looking end result.
In an application such as laser cladding, the laser output can be used to
  dictate the rate at which the cladding material is deposited. Similarly, if
  performing laser brazing, the laser output can be tied to a wire feeder, and
  the speed of the wire being fed into the process can be regulated.
Head movement
Recent advancements within the laser processing head have now made it possible
  for the robot to control the trepanning motion in some heads. Similar to a
  scanner welding head that directs the laser beam using galvanometric rotating
  mirrors controlled by a microcomputer, the robot controls the mirrors or
  lenses using auxiliary servo motors and it is, therefore, programmable using
  standard teach pendant robot programming.
This allows the robot to go to a fixed position and create unique patterns for
  different weld designs. These types of welding processes are quickly replacing
  traditional spot welding applications due to their speed, control and ability
  to be used on various materials beyond standard steel.
As the capabilities of the robots and their controllers advanced so did the
  availability and implementation of peripheral devices. For instance, laser
  height sensors have been adapted into robotics as a means of locating parts
  instead of traditional touch sensing. The benefits being it is faster than
  locating a part with the weld wire and has a higher resolution and better
  repeatability than the weld wire. Furthermore, it does not require physical
  contact with the part allowing for searches in tighter areas and areas further
  away from the tooling.
There are also low-powered lasers that guide the robot along various seams or
  patterns in the material so that the robot can adjust its path in real time to
  ensure it is still performing quality welding and cutting even if the base
  material contains a significant amount of variation.
Machine vision is another area that has grown tremendously in robotic
  automation. Industrial hardened camera systems have been used on robots to
  identify parts, read bar codes, perform inspections, pick objects from moving
  conveyor systems or out of bins, and locate objects in 3-D space and guide the
  robot to them.
Freedom of Movement
In a market that has been traditionally dominated by CNC controlled heads,
  robotically positioned laser welding and cutting is starting to gain market
  share as a result of the above mentioned advancements and, not surprisingly,
  by the flexibility of having a robot-carried processing head.
This means six degrees of freedom are possible, which allows the user to break
  away from the flat plate limitations of an X-Y table and explore processing
  3-D parts in 3-D space. This could be circular or square tubing or it could be
  part of an assembly like the inside of a truck frame.
Additionally, if auxiliary motors or another robot are used to manipulate the
  part, access within complex geometries is made easier by positioning the part
  and the robot into an optimum location. This also promotes the ability of
  coordinating the motion between the part and the robot so that the process can
  continue uninterrupted.
Another benefit of using a robot-carried head is the ability to change out the
  end-of-arm tooling between a welding head and a cutting head or change from a
  welding head to a pressure-driven grinding or polishing device for post-weld
  processing. This minimizes the real estate required on the expensive factory
  floor by not having individually dedicated processes.
With a simple tool changer, one robotic cell can perform multiple functions,
  increasing the quality and optimizing the cycle time per part. This solution
  also minimizes the amount of expensive, dedicated floor space required for
  performing multiple processes.