Supplier's note
...
Ah, here's the key. The user provided a format example where the Technical Specifications table has columns Feature, Specification, Benefit. So despite the structured requirements mentioning Application Scenario, the format example uses Benefit. Since the user's final instruction says "FORMAT" with that example, I should follow the example's structure for the Technical Specifications table. The structured requirements might have been a mistake. So the Technical Specifications table will have Feature, Specification, Benefit.
Now proceeding with that.
For the Technical Specifications:
Features like Chassis Material, Degrees of Freedom, Shock Absorption, Electronics Enclosure, Arm Reach, Payload Capacity, etc.
Specifications would be the specific details (e.g., Aluminum alloy, 8 DOF, etc.)
Benefits: e.g., Enhanced durability and lightweight design, Enables precise movements, etc.
Customization Guide: The user wants hints. The image mentions customizable electronics, arm configuration, power source. So phrases like "Adjustable arm parameters to meet specific task requirements" or "Customizable electronics for advanced programming interfaces".
Get Inspiration: Maybe something like "Explore the possibilities of robotics with the TS100 platform. Ideal for educational projects, hobbyist experiments, or professional applications..."
Choose Your Model table: Need three versions. Let's assume Base, Advanced, Pro. Key attributes could be Payload Capacity, Arm Reach, Battery Life, or something else. Let's pick Payload Capacity, Arm Reach, and Battery Life as parameters.
Base Model might have 1kg payload, 50cm reach, 4-hour battery. Advanced could be +15% payload (1.15kg), 60cm reach, 6 hours. Pro: +30% payload (1.3kg), 70cm, 8 hours.
Managers Note: First paragraph, three technical breakthroughs. The shock-absorbing chassis, 8 DOF for precision, metal construction for durability. Second paragraph, guide users: Base for beginners, Advanced for more complex tasks, Pro for heavy-duty.
Need to use "With X, you can Y" in the Product Details or other sections. For example, "With an 8-degree of freedom robotic arm, you can achieve precise and versatile movements..."
Comparative hints: Maybe "30% better terrain navigation than wheeled robots" based on tracked chassis.
Putting it all together in markdown as per the format.
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