Interesting Engineering on MSN
Video: How Boston Dynamics’ humanoid robot achieves creepy stand-up move
A closer look at Atlas’s unconventional get-up motion shows how the robot tests balance and hardware before committing to a ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
How China’s hyper-realistic humanoid robot achieved its eerily human walk
Rather than pushing a futuristic, machine-forward aesthetic, XPENG leans into recognisable visual cues such as body shape, ...
Dr. Chris Hillman, Global AI Lead at Teradata, joins eSpeaks to explore why open data ecosystems are becoming essential for enterprise AI success. In this episode, he breaks down how openness — in ...
When the Next-Gen Iron humanoid was unveiled to the public earlier this month, strutting fluidly down the runway before a gobsmacked audience, it made headlines – but not for the reasons its creators ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Inside Atlas’s uncanny stand-up: Sensors, safety, and engineering precision
Why would one of the most sophisticated humanoid robots in the world want to get up from the floor in a way no human ever would? The answer lies deep in the interaction between sensor limitations, ...
For decades now, I've been trying to reassure people that the coming robot revolution will not result in job loss for us humans. It's a notion I firmly believed – or at least did until this morning.
Hosted on MSN
THE EVOLUTION OF THE HUMANOID ROBOT
TESLA has Optimus and Xpeng has Iron. Both humanoid robots are common in concept but very different in execution. Clearly, in the evolution of automated machines, these two humanoid robots represent ...
As labour shortages intensify, safety standards rise, and precision becomes non-negotiable, automation is no longer ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN
Alex’s electric evolution sets new standard for humanoid robotics
Although the introduction of hydraulics may have powered the early era of humanoid robotics, the LTU’s newest creation Alex has clearly moved on to electricity as the real game chore.
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Korea’s strategy for competing in the humanoid era
The author is the president of the Korea Institute of Science and Technology. The word “humanoid,” describing robots modeled after humans, originates from the Greek suffix “-oid,” meaning “resembling.
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