Teleoperated robots at scale, even if years away, could mean a seismic shift in how we think about labor and automation.
If most robots still need remote human operators to be safe and effective, why should we welcome them into our homes?
South Korean researchers have developed a lightweight wearable robot that can walk up to paraplegic users and lock itself ...
She said: "My legs feel lighter!" The Express was visiting Shintomi nursing home in Tokyo, which has attracted international ...
Tesla Optimus robot, Figure 02 robot, and Clone Robotics' ghostly humanoid robot are some of tremendous innovations that ...
Chinese startup Pudu Robotics wants you to put its latest robot to work. The company's new humanoid D9 stands 5.57 ft (1.7 m) ...
In the long list of tasks we'd like humanoid robots to perform for us, shooting hoops is probably close to the bottom – if it makes the list at all. But the CUE bot from Toyota recently set its second ...
Central banks should “look through” the initial price effects ... Given the results, the natural question not examined by the BIS is whether robots can replace policymakers with an asymmetric ...
As quoted from Verywell Mind, in 1930, a Japanese professor named Tokeji Furukawa published a study proposing a relationship between blood type and personality. According to Furukawa, blood types A, B ...
If taking a bath has been a taxing task for you, then the worry is over because Japan has invented a "human washing machine," which thoroughly cleanses the human body while you sit. The new ...
Take a moment to imagine a world without robots. It’s hard, and for many, thinking back to the turn of the 20th century would be a “safe bet” of what a robot-less world might look like.