A new humanoid robot has stunned audiences with its eerie realism to the point where many refused to believe it was actually a machine.
How advanced actuators, compliance control, and real-time planning create capable, safe humanoid collaborators.
Have you ever wanted to wipe down a table hundreds of times while Elon Musk watches? Training Tesla's humanoid robot might be the job for you.
X’s Neo wants to be your housekeeper. First, it needs to be controlled by a human in your home. Cool with you?
Welcome to this week’s episode of “man-made horrors beyond human comprehension.” A humanoid robot named DeREK had what you might call a “moment” on the floor of a San Francisco robotics lab this week, ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. Humanoid robots struggle with basic tasks like walking safely and lack the dexterity needed for complex human-like ...
The bipedal bot, which has been a decade in development, stands at 66 inches and tips the scales at 66 pounds. It ...
XPENG showcases its new-generation humanoid robot "IRON" during the company's 2025 Tech Day on November 5, 2025. Photo: ...
The future of home help has arrived. NEO, the worlds first humanoid home robot, is now available for pre-order. It can walk, ...
Clanker, rust bucket, tinskin — slang words used to put down robots are on the rise. As AI and robots threaten to replace human work and maybe even humans, the recent popularity of anti-robot lingo ...