Humanoid robots are rapidly improving in motion fluidity, making them more human-like and suitable for complex tasks.
As humanoid robotics approach commercialization, developers are still working to improve navigation, manipulation, and skills learning.
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?
Unitree G1 humanoid robot KOID told CNBC that "only time will tell" if the AI boom is actually a bubble. KOID is manufactured by Unitree, one of China's hottest tech companies, and the Nvidia-powered ...
Humanoid robots have quietly crossed a threshold: they are no longer just research prototypes or sci-fi props. They walk, run, lift, learn workflows, and increasingly interact with human environments ...
These automation devices are also being introduced to logistics environments, as the marketplace grows to a projected $30 ...
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, ...
The global humanoid robots market is poised for rapid growth as it transitions from prototyping to commercial deployment, driven by advances in AI, hardware capabilities, and labor shortages.
Humanoid robots are beginning to take on household tasks, showing how AI-powered machines could soon assist with chores in ...
At Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, the nurse assistant stopped by a patient's room to pick up some lab samples while dropping off toiletries. Then, as the helper's pixilated blue eyes ...
As China hurries to beat the US in a technology arms race, it is throwing billions at developing machines for everything from warfare to making coffee. But is it too much, too soon?