Xpeng's humanoid robot moves so realistically that crowds believed it was fake, marking a major advancement in robotics technology ahead of 2026 commercial launch.
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Inside XPENG’s cut-open robot: Engineering the human touch
Can cutting open a robot be the best way to win an engineering argument? That slice through synthetic skin, theatrically done ...
Step inside the Soft Robotics Lab at ETH Zurich, and you find yourself in a space that is part children's nursery, part ...
See new human-shaped robots, including MIMA’s skill-glove training for dishes and laundry, so you can gauge real home-ready ...
At the Soft Robotics Lab at ETH Zurich, the scene looks less like a traditional engineering workshop and more like a child’s ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
The science of human touch, and why it's so hard to replicate in robots
Robots now see the world with an ease that once belonged only to science fiction. They can recognize objects, navigate ...
There is also a dance studio, complete with a wood floor and large mirrors. Here scientists record the movements of human ...
Researchers at Robotics Institute at UCSD are developing robots designed to work alongside humans and exploring what ...
Now that artificial intelligence has mastered almost everything we do online, it needs help learning how we physically move around in the real world. A growing global army of trainers is helping it ...
Tiny robots smaller than a grain of rice can sense, think, and move on their own. They could one day fix tissue inside the human body.
Tesla uses a team of data collectors to train Optimus how to be human. The workers run, dance, and perform simple tasks like wiping a table hundreds of times. Data collectors said the role is ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results