"We think there’s a moral imperative to put these robots into war instead of soldiers." The post Company Testing Humanoid ...
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?
Imagine general-purpose humanoid robots becoming as ubiquitous as smartphones. Luke O'Neill joins Pat Kennt to discuss.
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Inside the grueling training teaching humanoid robots to move like humans
Teaching a humanoid robot to move naturally is less a software trick than a data marathon. Behind the polished demos of ...
AGIBOT’s X2 humanoid robot shows how quickly robotics is evolving, with advanced mobility, expressive interaction, and growing real-world uses.
Sunday is on a quest to build a household humanoid robot called Memo that helps with tasks like laundry and clearing the table. The company emerged from stealth late last year and already has 1,000 ...
Figure is gradually prepping its humanoid robot to competently take on household chores. While the California-based company has ambitions to deploy its robot in industrial settings like factories and ...
CES 2026 highlighted a trend growing over the past few years: The humanoid robots era. What would previously be announcements of fast quadruped robots, dog-like machines running around that would make ...
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 ...
Bringing robots that look and move like humans to households and factories is closer than ever. But despite promises from a growing number of startups, fully autonomous humanoid robots are still years ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
China unveils ‘blue-collar’ humanoid robot that switches tools in six seconds
Chinese robotics firm XGSynBot debuted its Z1 humanoid robot capable of working across multiple ...
12don MSNOpinion
China Could Dominate the Physical AI Future
Eric Schmidt and Selina Xu argue that China is pulling head of the U.S. in the race to build AI-powered robots.
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