Though Atlas was designed to resemble a person in other ways, its hands aren’t exactly one-to-one. Instead, company engineers ...
Goldman Sachs is also bullish on the growth of this market. The Wall Street firm's "base-case" estimate is for 1.4 million shipments of humanoids by 2035. Its "bull-case" projects unit shipments to ...
How to revolutionize the high-tech world? The specialists at the Boston Dynamics American firm have a suitable answer: to ...
The development of advanced robots like Atlas continues to illustrate “Moravec’s Paradox,” a concept highlighting the surprising difficulty robots face with tasks humans find simple, such as motor ...
Think of actuators as the robot’s muscles —the technology that enables humanoids to move. Actuators come in three types: ...
Boston Dynamics’ humanoid robot may have skipped the inaugural “robot Olympics” in China last week, but that doesn’t mean the engineers behind the machine have been sitting around watching the world ...
The robot, built by local robotics firm OryLab and called OriHime, offers guided walking tours to visitors to Japan’s capital city by talking into their ear and showing them around, The Japan Times ...
South Korean auto giant Hyundai Motor Group has entered into a long-term partnership with its US-based robotics subsidiary Boston Dynamics Inc. The collaboration would entail the automaker helping the ...
Boston Dynamics, the 32-year-old company famed for its amusing or creepy (depending on your interpretation) advanced robots including Atlas (humanoid) and Spot (a dog-like quadruped) featured in viral ...
WPP's tests with a Boston Dynamics humanoid robot working as a camera operator on a LED volume using a Canon Cinema Camera with a DJI Ronin gimbal have lit up discussion about the place of such tech ...