This week, software learned new tricks, hardware sprouted extra limbs, and investors rushed to fund both before the coffee ...
Elon Musk believes robots will be “the biggest product ever in history.” His Tesla robot Optimus can already climb stairs and ...
"What makes this particularly concerning is that it's completely wormable – infected robots can automatically compromise ...
In some sense, Mr. Brooks has only himself to blame. The current humanoid craze is “kind of his fault,” said Anthony Jules, ...
President Trump recently issued an executive order that treats AI as critical infrastructure. Is he about to do the same ...
Tech investors are pouring billions into the effort, but Rodney Brooks argues that general-purpose humanoid robots will not ...
According to DataM Intelligence, the global Cloud Robotics Market reached USD 8.41 billion in 2024 and is projected to expand ...
Nvidia Corp. and SoftBank Group Corp. are reportedly holding talks with the robotic artificial intelligence startup Skild AI over a $1 billion investment. The proposed round would bring the startup’s ...
Computer-use agents and self-clicking AI browsers make for great demos but struggle to offer obvious utility to most people.
The tech industry is obsessed with humanoid robots, and people are fascinated by them. But for almost every application they’re pitched for, they make zero sense.
An IEEE senior member discusses the results of the organization's global study on the potential impact of AI robotics.
Technology is rapidly evolving to address fundamental human needs rather than just technical challenges, according to Dr. Werner Vogels, CTO of Amazon.