Xpeng's new humanoid, IRON, is designed to work alongside people — but it won't be folding your laundry anytime soon.
A new humanoid robot has stunned audiences with its eerie realism to the point where many refused to believe it was actually a machine.
However, while this seemed like a strange design decision to some, XPENG does have reasons for modelling its IRON robot on a woman. Addressing the IRON's form factor during his keynote speech, XPENG's ...
Chinese company XPeng showed off a robot with distinctly female anatomy, including pronounced breasts and hips, sparking a ...
Flashy humanoid robots that have awed attendees at Web Summit in Lisbon this week are still far from revolutionizing physical ...
On Wednesday, Clone Robotics released video footage of its Protoclone humanoid robot, a full-body machine that uses synthetic muscles to create unsettlingly human-like movements. In the video, the ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. Humanoid robots struggle with basic tasks like walking safely and lack the dexterity needed for complex human-like ...
A pair of swivelling, human-like robotic arms, built for physical artificial intelligence research, mirror the motions of an ...
Feminine artificial intelligence is a trope that’s not uncommon in fiction by now, especially in film and on television. Take a hot female robot and a misogynistic male human and you’ve got a typical ...