Figure AI claims its three humanoid robots completed over 24 hours of continuous autonomous package sorting without any human control in a warehouse test.
Fish-scale-like gaps help soft robotic grippers sense bending, texture, and firmness through small contact changes.
China has sent humanoid robots into the tea mountains of Fujian, not for a clean laboratory demo, but for the messy work of ...
At Gerald R. Ford International Airport, a new autonomous robot being tested aims to streamline tasks at airports, freeing up ...
Humanoid robots tested tea picking in China. See why delicate leaves and mountain roads proved to be a difficult challenge ...
Amazon unveiled a next-gen Proteus robot that takes conversational commands, part of a €10bn (~$11.6bn) European fulfilment investment.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Robotic suit simulates weightlessness on Earth to improve astronaut motor skills
Researchers from the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) and the University of ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Watch: Figure’s humanoid robots work for 200 hours, process 250k packages without failure
US robotics company Figure AI has completed a 200-hour autonomous livestream using its Figure ...
Figure AI’s Helix 02 humanoid robots neared 40 hours of autonomous work and almost 50,000 packages in a livestreamed warehouse demo.
Morning Overview on MSN
A Chinese lab just gave a humanoid robot electronic skin sensitive enough to feel a light touch — a step toward machines that handle fragile things like we do
A humanoid robot that can sense your hand approaching before you even make contact, then catch an egg without cracking it: ...
Morning Overview on MSN
A Chinese lab just wrapped a humanoid robot in soft electronic skin that feels a feather’s touch — letting it handle fragile objects without crushing them
A team at Tsinghua University in Beijing has built a soft electronic skin for humanoid robots that converts even the lightest ...
Thanks to new technologies like artificial intelligence, scientists are increasingly freed from the constraints of the laboratory. It raises questions about how much humans should outsource to robots.
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