Interesting Engineering on MSN
Can Optimus make America win the humanoid robot race? Here’s the verdict
While Optimus is not yet the American humanoid robot poster boy (Atlas still holds that title), it can certainly stir a pot, sweep, and vacuum. It can now open and close cabinets and curtains, tear a ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Next-generation humanoid robot can do the moonwalk
KAIST research team's independently developed humanoid robot boasts world-class driving performance, reaching speeds of ...
From drones and humanoid robots to collaborative “cobots” designed to work alongside humans, sophisticated machines are ...
A whole-body control foundation model could help launch humanoid robots toward general-purpose capability, says Agility ...
Until now, robots have been able to walk on flat surfaces. Even then, they've needed almost constant human guidance. These ...
The remarkable robot dog — or more accurately, its AI-powered brain — can even handle having its legs extended by wooden poles, or having wheels attached. Short of a rocket-propelled grenade coming ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Simulated humanoid robots learn to hike rugged terrain autonomously
Training humanoid robots to hike could accelerate development of embodied AI for tasks like autonomous search and rescue, ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Video: 'Anti-gravity mode' lets China’s humanoid robot survive repeated kicks
Unitree’s G1 robot can take hits, falls, and shoves, then quickly get back on its feet thanks to Anti-Gravity mode.
Researchers found that working with a humanoid robot can change how our brains map the body, making its hand feel like part of our own.
The humanoid robot Agibot Lingxi X2 has performed a Webster flip. The forward somersault, performed with a single leg, requires a high degree of body control.
A video making its rounds on social media shows an engineer from a startup called Skild AI taking a chainsaw to the limbs of a robot dog.
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