Neo, a $20,000 humanoid robot by 1X Technologies, promises to handle household chores but currently relies on human operators, raising questions about its true autonomy and privacy concerns.
Humanoid robot training is booming around the world. Tech companies are rushing to build the robots for a market projected to ...
XPENG's Iron robot was revealed with its inner workings exposed, sans clothing or any covering, but that may not be its final ...
Developed at the University of California San Diego, the system pairs soft, stretchable sensors with a deep-learning engine ...
Russia ’s first humanoid robot with artificial intelligence fell on stage during its official debut at a technology event in ...
Once again, with its metal innards exposed, Iron walked across the stage in a very human-like way. It’s an extraordinary ...
AI robots are being trained on data from real humans who record themselves doing chores for a living. But they’re not doing ...
A Chinese EV company has created a humanoid robot so eerily lifelike engineers were forced to cut it open to prove it was, in fact, a robot.
Industrial automation is entering a new era with physical AI, where machine learning meets real-world motion control.
One of the biggest hurdles in developing humanoid robots is the sheer amount of training data required. Teaching machines to act like humans demands massive video datasets. Collecting that data is ...
One October 2025 Facebook post elaborated on Erbai's actions, suggesting the 12 robots felt overworked. Its caption read: I n ...