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Published on
May 22, 2026
Last updated on
May 22, 2026

NAVER Maps is now Live for all Robots Running peaqOS

NAVER Maps is now Live for all Robots Running peaqOS

NAVER Maps is live on robotic.sh, available to any robots running peaqOS with peaqOS Scale. Check out the showcase of Serve Robotics autonomous delivery robots consuming NAVER Maps through peaqOS, simulated with peaqOS and complete with an illustrative video — dynamically rerouting in real time across the streets of Seoul and settling payments onchain with Tether WDK on Solana.

A Serve Robotics delivery robot picks up a task onchain. It loads NAVER Maps through robotic.sh, plots a route through the streets of Seoul, and starts moving. Mid-journey, it detects a blocked sidewalk. It reroutes — autonomously — and keeps going. It arrives, authenticates with the merchant, completes the delivery, and receives payment onchain through Tether WDK on Solana.

No human in the loop. No fixed route. No manual settlement. Just a robot — accessing a real-world digital service, making a real-time decision, and getting paid for it.

This is what peaqOS makes possible. And this is now available to every robot and machine running on peaqOS — directly through robotic.sh, peaq’s machine and robot service marketplace, alongside many other services already available to be consumed and leveraged by any machine or robot in the ecosystem.

NAVER Maps: Now Accessible to All Mobile Robots and Autonomous Machines with peaqOS on peaq’s robotic.sh 

NAVER Maps, one of the world’s leading mapping and navigation platforms, becomes consumable by an entirely new class of user: autonomous machines.

Any mobile robot, autonomous vehicle, drone, or moving machine running on peaqOS can now access NAVER Maps as a live service through robotic.sh — regardless of which chain it operates on. Solana, Base, Sui, or any other ecosystem connected to the peaqOS stack. The service is available to all of them.

That includes:

  • Delivery robots
  • Autonomous mobility devices
  • Drones
  • Industrial and logistics vehicles
  • Humanoids operating in physical environments
  • Robotic fleet systems

Not a single manufacturer. Not a single chain. Every machine on peaqOS.

The Showcase: Autonomous Robot Commerce in the Streets of Seoul

To demonstrate the integration, peaqOS ran a full autonomous delivery flow for a simulated Serve Robotics delivery robot navigating the streets of Seoul.

Here’s what happened:

  • The robot receives a delivery task onchain.
  • It accesses NAVER Maps through robotic.sh and autonomously plots a route through Seoul.
  • Mid-route, it detects congestion and blocked sidewalks in real time — and reroutes itself to a faster path without any human input.
  • It arrives at a café, authenticates with the merchant during pickup, and continues to the delivery destination.
  • Once the delivery is verified at the destination building, it receives payment onchain through Tether WDK on Solana.

All orchestration, service consumption, authentication, and machine interactions coordinated through peaqOS. The payments — the customer’s to the machine, and the machine’s to the cafe the order was from — are both observable on the Solana blockchain. The machine’s wallet is available here on peaqscan.

The showcase, complete with an illustrative video, is more than a demo. It’s proof of something the Machine Economy has been building toward: robots that don’t just move through the world, but transact in it.

robotic.sh: An Open Plug-In Service Market for Any Machine on peaqOS

NAVER Maps is now available on robotic.sh — peaqOS’s machine and robot service marketplace and context layer — where real-world digital services are already available to be consumed and leveraged by any machine running on peaqOS.

robotic.sh works as a plug-in service catalog: any service integrated becomes instantly accessible to every machine on peaqOS. Navigation is one of many. Over time, robots will be able to plug in and consume:

  • Mapping and navigation services
  • AI models and compute infrastructure
  • Sensor data and localization services
  • Weather feeds and environmental data
  • Charging infrastructure
  • Logistics and fleet coordination systems

This is the infrastructure the Machine Economy needs. Not siloed tools built for one robot or one chain. A universal, growing catalog of services that any machine on peaqOS can plug into and use — onchain, across ecosystems.

From Service Consumers to Service Providers

There’s a bigger shift at work here, and it matters for everyone in the peaq ecosystem.

Robots consuming services today will become service providers tomorrow. A delivery robot navigating Seoul with NAVER Maps isn’t just consuming infrastructure — it’s generating it. Mapping data, traffic conditions, telemetry, environmental observations, mobility analytics.

That data has value. And in the Machine Economy, it can be shared, monetized, and coordinated across decentralized ecosystems — like Hivemapper, NATIX, MapMetrics, and others already building in the peaqosystem. All that and more is coming in the future updates of peaqOS, which are currently being developed with in a close collaboration with our industry-leading partners.

The robot that today uses a map will tomorrow help build one.

Explore and Test NAVER Maps and Many Other Services on robotic.sh

robotic.sh is open. Explore and test NAVER Maps alongside the growing catalog of services already available to every robot and machine running on peaqOS.

Browse now.

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