General-purpose robots remain rare not for a lack of hardware but because we still can’t give machines the physical intuition ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
World’s first six-armed humanoid robot that promises 30% more output unveiled in China
A Chinese appliance company has taken a major step into the future of industrial ...
The commercial boom in artificial intelligence has sparked interest in humanoid robots. Venture capitalist Modar Alaoui, ...
See new human-shaped robots, including MIMA’s skill-glove training for dishes and laundry, so you can gauge real home-ready ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Video: How Boston Dynamics’ humanoid robot achieves creepy stand-up move
Boston Dynamics has released a new explanation of one of Atlas’s most striking behaviors.
In Detroit, entrepreneur Art Cartwright’s humanoid robot went viral after it was captured on video along a busy street. The attention comes as humanoid robot companies attempt to publicize their ...
Looking for a home humanoid robot that will clean your house, cook your food, and maybe even take the dog for a walk? It just got one step closer ...
An American company says it has built the first consumer-ready humanoid robot that can do all sorts of home chores, such as folding laundry, organising shelves, and tidying spaces. 1X Home Robots ...
The price tag is orders of magnitude cheaper than most robots in its class, which can run into tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars. Now China’s Unitree Robotics, best known for its nimble ...
Humanoid robots have come on leaps and bounds in the last couple of years, but the grand promises of factories filled with bipedal bots performing meaningful tasks, or robotic home helpers doing ...
Chinese EV company XPENG unveiled its next-gen humanoid robot IRON during its AI Day event in Guangzhou, having it walk onto the stage in a stilted yet strangely lifelike saunter. The reveal swiftly ...
Robot makers want us all to believe we’re on the brink of an autonomous humanoid robot revolution. But that’s just not true. Call it 'faith-based innovation.' A Silicon Valley company called 1X this ...
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