An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows A white and black humanoid robot prototype from Tesla stands against a ...
Overview: Robotics is expanding beyond factories and entering homes, hospitals, workplaces, and smart city infrastructure.Advances in artificial intelligence, s ...
Musk reposted the 38-second video on his X profile, which was originally created by Alex Utopia and shows Tesla's humanoid robots doing a variety of everyday jobs. Since Musk posted the clip, it has ...
Elon Musk told the World Economic Forum on Thursday about his vision for a world where there are more robots than people—enough robots that you won't be able to think of anything more to ask them to ...
Researchers at Penn and the University of Michigan have developed the world’s smallest, fully autonomous robots. The health ...
Humanoid robots have arms and legs, but can they work alongside human beings, or will they replace them? Their use is growing, but are they ready?
In the future, a caregiving machine might gently lift an elderly person out of bed in the morning and help them get dressed. A cleaning bot could trundle through a child’s room, picking up scattered ...
In the future, many significant but repetitive tasks currently done by humans at airports could be completed by robots that utilize artificial intelligence. For years, airports across the world have ...
11don MSNOpinion
China Could Dominate the Physical AI Future
Eric Schmidt and Selina Xu argue that China is pulling head of the U.S. in the race to build AI-powered robots.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
New robot AI predicts physical motion from video to guide machines in real time
Robotics startup Rhoda AI has emerged from stealth with a new approach to robot ...
India Today on MSN
Indian robots will rival the world's best in 3-5 years, will be cheaper too: Bidyut MD
Bidyut Innovation MD Rahul Shah spoke during the India Today Conclave 2026. Shah reckoned that India could soon have its own ...
As China hurries to beat the US in a technology arms race, it is throwing billions at developing machines for everything from warfare to making coffee. But is it too much, too soon?
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