Industrial robots like robotic arms are basically everywhere, albeit usually out of the public’s eye in factories. This also means that they get replaced and scrapped all the time, making ...
A Chinese robotics company showed off an unsettling creation — a robot with a very human-like face. It's giving 'Westworld' ...
Manufacturing is changing faster than at any point in my career. Robotics and automation are already reshaping how we design products, run factories, ensure quality, and move goods around the world.
The Nvidia Corporation tie puts Physical AI in Alibaba Cloud, a picks-and-shovels bet to win China’s humanoid training. Click ...
What if a robot could handle cleaning, serving and even complex tasks around your home or workplace? That's exactly what X Square Robot hopes to deliver with its latest launch. The company just ...
A San Francisco-based company has developed a robotic system that is installed in a small box. The innovation includes two robotic arms capable of grabbing and moving objects. The system is capable of ...
Ashely Claudino is an Evergreen Staff Writer from Portugal. She has a Translation degree from the University of Lisbon (2020, Faculty of Arts and Humanities). Nowadays, she mostly writes Fortnite and ...
Hot off of proudly announcing that he had replaced 4,000 people with AI at his company, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff posted a video of Tesla’s humanoid robot, Optimus, calling it a “productivity ...
Programming industrial robots is a labor-intensive process that often depends on teach pendants, offline tools, and trial-and-error. Coordinating multiple robots in ...
China’s Dreame wants to build the world’s fastest car by 2027. Dreame Technology, a Chinese electronics company best known for vacuum cleaners, this week announced that it would launch an electric ...
Picture an auto factory humming with energy. A robot rapidly assembles car doors while a human checks each one for quality. Their partnership looks seamless – with machines handling speed and strength ...
From left, engineering professor Morteza Lahijanian and graduate student Karan Muvvala watch as a robotic arm completes a task using wooden blocks. Imagine for a moment that you’re in an auto factory.