China, Lunar New Year and robots
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To his credit, Kasy is a realist here. He doesn’t presume that any of these proposals will be easy to implement. Or that it will happen overnight, or even in the near future. The troubling question at the end his book is: Do we have that kind of time?
In today’s rapidly advancing technological landscape, the concept of humanoid robots no longer belongs to the realm of science fiction.
Faraday Future just unveiled three robots. The company says the robots will begin delivery in late February.
After failing to deliver its promised "Tesla killer" EV, Faraday Future is hoping it's robot has what it takes to finally pull ahead of Elon.
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 do. He also predicted that he will begin selling ...
Four rising humanoid robot startups demonstrated their products at the annual CCTV Spring Festival gala, a televised event and touchstone for China akin to the Super Bowl.
The robotics market is becoming more diversified and less tied to a single sector. Asia remains the largest robotics market. China accounted for 54 percent of global installations in 2024 and 43 percent of total operational stock. Source: International Federation of Robotics as of 2025.
If Destruction Be Our Lot is a new Image Comics series that reveals the sad plight of the robots who soldier on after humanity has been wiped out by A.I.
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 objects, depositing toys on shelves and tucking away ...
Highlights the Company’s strategic business recalibration into three pillars: commercial, industrial and data services LAS VEGAS, Feb. 17, 2026
In the new animated film, "Arco," a time-traveling boy gets trapped in the year 2075 and must evade captors, robots and wildfires. NPR's Scott Simon talks to writer and director Ugo Bienvenu.