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Tech expert Kurt “CyberGuy" Knutsson says Hugging Face has launched affordable open-source humanoid robots for home AI exploration.
The U.S. and China are racing to build humanoid robots capable of performing many daily tasks – but the complexity of home and business environments makes that challenging.
Companies such as Tesla are racing to build humanoid robots and have made strides. Last week, Elon Musk’s company said its Optimus robot had learned to perform household chores.
MIT professor Daniela Rus explains how AI-powered robots are being trained to safely assist in homes and daily life.
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Interesting Engineering on MSNRobots learn to prioritize human safety with smarter decision-making system
The new algorithm could help robots make safer, smarter decisions around humans, even amidst the greatest uncertainties.
Part four of Tesla’s “Master Plan” de-emphasizes its EV business, which is on pace for its second consecutive year of ...
It has a synthetic uterus, fake amniotic fluid, and a plastic umbilical cord. And if its creators are right, it might deliver ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNBody, not brain: How design flaws stop humanoid robots from leaving the lab
They flip, fold, and dance, but humanoid robots are burning more energy than humans on simple tasks. Experts say the flaw is in the design.
Ken Goldberg shares his thoughts about the “humanoid hype” and the emerging paradigm shift in the robotics field.
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