Interesting Engineering on MSN
Video: Chinese compact humanoid robot impresses with humanlike recovery and balance
Chinese robotics firm EngineAI is advancing humanoid technology with a showcase of its compact ...
Baller Alert on MSN
Toyota rolls out humanoid robots at Canada plant following secret year-long pilot program
Toyota is officially putting robots on the factory floor, and not just for show. After a quiet year-long pilot project, ...
Toborlife AI announces the upcoming availability of the Unitree H2 humanoid robot in the North American market.
Mantis Robotics today announced a landmark shift in industrial automation: the Mantis MR-1 flagship robot has become the first fenceless, high-speed industrial arm to receive safety certification to ...
China’s humanoid robots underwent rigorous training in advanced skills such as parkour, acrobatics and martial arts ahead of ...
The PM01 robot from EngineAI (China) impresses with its ability to balance, absorb impact forces, and self-recover from a posture as accurately as a human.
What if the future of industrial automation could fit in the palm of your hand? Imagine a robot arm so compact it could rest on your desk, yet so precise it operates with sub-micrometer accuracy, a ...
A virtual forearm can bend in a blink. It can also take its time, easing toward a target as if it is thinking about the move.
As AI powered prosthetic arms become more advanced, a surprising detail could determine whether they truly feel like part of the body: how fast they move.
A robotic arm that moves too quickly can feel creepy. One that moves too slowly feels awkward and unhelpful. In a VR study, researchers found that AI-powered prosthetic arms were best accepted when ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results