Humanoid robots have arms and legs, but can they work alongside human beings, or will they replace them? Their use is growing, but are they ready?
As humanoid robotics approach commercialization, developers are still working to improve navigation, manipulation, and skills learning.
Hardware costs for humanoid robots are plummeting, but managing a fleet of these autonomous workers will severely test your enterprise IT infrastructure, security, and budget.
For decades, humanoid robots have lived behind safety cages in factories or deep inside research labs. Fauna Robotics, a New York-based robotics startup, says that era is ending. The company has ...
Twenty-five years of the new millennium have passed and we’re still waiting for the futuristic world we were promised: Living in space, hover-cars, jet packs and extraterrestrial encounters. However, ...
Beijing-based startup RoboParty has open-sourced its flagship bipedal humanoid, Roboto Origin, just months after completing R&D in 120 days. As the world’s first full-stack open-source bipedal ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Chinese humanoid robots could soon beat the fastest human ever in sprinting: Report
Chinese humanoid robots are rapidly advancing toward a milestone once reserved for elite human ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
UBTech’s goal to mass-produce 10,000 humanoid robots by 2026 gets Siemens backing
Chinese robotics firm UBTech has signed a strategic cooperation agreement with Siemens Digital Industries ...
Roboticists have struggled to get humanoid robots to effectively replicate athletic sports skills, such as those needed for tennis. These sports require highly dynamic motion, quick reactions, and ...
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