There's an app for everything. And everything has an App Store. Including, now, humanoid robots, courtesy of Unitree.
5don MSN
Backflips are easy, stairs are hard: Robots still struggle with simple human movements, experts say
Yet the next generation of robots will soon be able to learn from experience, creating more adaptable machines—perfect for ...
Step inside the Soft Robotics Lab at ETH Zurich, and you find yourself in a space that is part children's nursery, part ...
One of the most significant insights from the study is that roboticists must engage both technically and physically with ...
A clip showing a humanoid robot from Chinese robotics company EngineAI executing martial-arts-style kicks and fast, precise ...
General-purpose robots remain rare not for a lack of hardware but because we still can’t give machines the physical intuition ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
World’s first humanoid robot app store lets users control droids by phone
Unitree has unveiled what it calls the world’s first humanoid robot app store, letting users control and program robots ...
See new human-shaped robots, including MIMA’s skill-glove training for dishes and laundry, so you can gauge real home-ready ...
Humanoid robots now jog, jump, and balance mid-air, with Tesla Optimus 3 on display, helping you see where home and workplace ...
Xpeng's humanoid robot moves so realistically that crowds believed it was fake, marking a major advancement in robotics ...
Futurism on MSN
Alarming Video Shows Humanoid Robot Demon-Scuttling
A recent video shows how a humanoid robot can turn itself into a surprisingly creepy crawling machine, using the full extent of its limbs.
Analysts at the investment bank estimated the humanoid robot market will be worth more than $5 trillion by 2050.
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