Neo, a $20,000 humanoid robot by 1X Technologies, promises to handle household chores but currently relies on human operators ...
Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Recent advances in language and vision models have helped make great ...
No, this is not a new optimistic robot that requires positive reinforcement. Stanford researchers have introduced YAY, a system that lets you yell instructions at your robot to improve its performance ...
USF is working to improve communication in emergencies and everyday life by teaching robots to project instructions onto ...
Human brains, much like computers, run on electrical signals that are fired from our neurons. Every single movement, thought, and aspect of the human body is run by electrical signals firing from the ...
What just happened? Researchers from King's College London have figured out how to give robots complex instructions without using any electricity at all, not even through batteries. The key is a new ...
Scientists have developed a programmable “molecular robot” — a sub-microscopic molecular machine made of synthetic DNA that moves between track locations separated by 6nm. The robot, a short strand of ...
Shanghai-based tech firm KEENON Robotics, established in 2010, has evolved over the past 15 years from an experimental ...
OSF HealthCare Saint Anthony Medical Center has a new robot on its team and looks to the community to give it a name.
The NEO robot by 1X Robotics claims to be the first humanoid robot that can do chores.
On October 26, 1984, Orion Pictures released The Terminator, a movie about genocidal AI-powered robots unleashed by a tech company. Unfortunately, the executives at Microsoft must have been doing ...
Recent advances in language and vision models have helped make great progress in creating robotic systems that can follow instructions from text descriptions or images. However, there are limits to ...