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.
Across Las Vegas this week, tech companies used the CES trade show to reveal their visions of a future filled with physical artificial intelligence. Nvidia, AMD and Qualcomm made splashy robot-related ...
When the streets of Los Angeles flooded with rain last week, some of the city’s residents found themselves feeling sorry for a peculiar object: a food delivery robot floundering in water and debris.
Robots have always been part of CES. For years, they have danced, played games, and entertained crowds on the show floor. But at CES this year, something feels different. Humanoid robots are no longer ...
This article is part of Kotaku Deals, produced separately from the editorial team. We may earn a commission when you buy through links on the site. Cheap robot vacuums that bump randomly around rooms, ...
Something to look forward to: Robots are beginning to see and respond in real time. A new study published in Nature Communications by researchers at Beihang University in China describes a vision ...