Morning Overview on MSN
Meet Ameca, the most lifelike humanoid robot so far
Humanoid robots have been promised for decades, but most still look and move like machines. Ameca changes that, with a face ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
How China’s hyper-realistic humanoid robot achieved its eerily human walk
Rather than pushing a futuristic, machine-forward aesthetic, XPENG leans into recognisable visual cues such as body shape, ...
Daniela Rus has spent her career breaking barriers—scientific, social, and material—in her quest to build machines that ...
People implanted with Elon Musk’s Neuralink brain chip can now move robotic arms using only their thoughts, as the device ...
"My breathing has improved 100%,” Cheryl Mehrkar tells PEOPLE following the groundbreaking procedure Photo by NYU Langone Health Surgeons in New York have become the first in the world to complete a ...
Meet Alex, a humanoid robot designed to replace ping pong playing Nadia. The new robot created by IHMC in downtown Pensacola has great expectations.
New robotic shorts could transform the way older adults and frail people walk. Designed to improve mobility and independence, the WalkON shorts were created to be worn over everyday clothes and could ...
Many lonely people would rather deal with a robot than interact with an actual human, according to research co-led by Newcastle University. Contrary to the common assumption that lonely people would ...
Japan is turning to robots and AI tracking tech as dementia cases rise and thousands of older residents go missing each year.
Six of multiple possible assistance scenarios with a prototype of a new robot being developed at MIT. Top row: getting into/out of a bathtub, bending down to reach objects, and catching a fall. Bottom ...
In science fiction, robots can be neurotic. Think "Star Wars" and C-3PO. (SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "STAR WARS: EPISODE IV - A NEW HOPE") ANTHONY DANIELS: (As C-3PO) What are we going to do? We'll be sent to ...
A dozen or so young men and women, eyes obscured by VR headsets, shuffle around a faux kitchen inside a tech company’s Silicon Valley headquarters. Their arms are bent at the elbows, palms facing down ...
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