These Uworld U1 androids are covered with 'biomimetic skin' that looks and feels just like that of a real human.
Their metallic frames covered in supple, lifelike skin, a posse of new Chinese robots meant for companionship can offer users ...
Picture a robot. What comes to mind? Perhaps a droid from Star Wars or The Jetsons: a machine that can move, speak and perform tasks all by itself. Or maybe your imagination jumps to humanoid robots à ...
Walking robots, such as quadruped robotic dogs, must be able to move safely through rough, often changing environments. Today ...
Fleets of Apollo 2 robots continuously collect real-world data across multiple Robot Park locations and customer sites ...
Humans have been fascinated with humanoid machines even before modern engineering made them possible. From Greek mythology to ...
I tested a $125,000 humanoid robot. It couldn't read my emotions, but its jokes and sense of humor made it feel surprisingly human.
Humanoid robots are moving from science fiction into the real world, with several models now available for homes, research labs and industrial deployments.
Most robot headlines follow a familiar script: a machine masters one narrow trick in a controlled lab, then comes the bold promise that everything is about to change. I usually tune those stories out.
Beijing's Booster Robotics powered every winning team at RoboCup 2026 in South Korea. The sport's goal: beat the human World Cup champions by 2050.
Robots are no longer limited to carefully controlled lab settings. They’re sorting packages, navigating warehouses, assisting on factory floors and supporting a growing range of business operations, ...