Robots come in a vast array of shapes and sizes. By definition, they're machines that perform automatic tasks and can be operated by humans, but sometimes work autonomously—without human help.
Madison’s new humanoid robotics club plan to deploy an autonomous, two-armed robot that can deliver food and fold laundry by the end of this year, giving members project design skills.
AI’s concealed labor has repeatedly led us to overestimate the technology. Humanoid robots are entering a similar phase.
Family offices and ultra-high-net-worth investors, many of whom missed earlier waves in AI, are increasingly exploring ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Dr. Jonathan Reichental covers technology in business and society. Toy versions of the popular droids R2-D2 and BB-8, part of the ...
From robotics innovation to flagship devices, HONOR expands its AI device ecosystem at MWC 2026 ...
Stanford-educated roboticist Samir Menon never set out to replace human workers with machines. He wants to ‘supercharge’ them, and now his billion-dollar startup, Dexterity, is betting that vision ...
NEW YORK — As the new robot called Sprout walks around a Manhattan office, nodding its rectangular head, lifting its windshield wiper-like “eyebrows” and offering to shake your hand with its grippers, ...
A 13-foot robot nicknamed Godzilla is being engineered to assemble components inside ITER, the massive fusion reactor taking ...
AI-powered delivery robots from companies like Serve Robotics are replacing human drivers across the nation — but they can't ...
On industrial sites and large farms, critical work often happens in fields, hillsides and overgrown areas that are difficult or dangerous for people to access. CMU researchers are developing off-road ...