AI robots take stage for China’s New Year celebration
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Humanoid robots will be bigger than artificial intelligence—and business leaders are not ready
For most everyone, the interaction with artificial intelligence (AI) has been on a screen or on the phone. AI answers questions, summarizes documents, drafts emails, and quietly optimizes our digital lives.
China’s humanoid robotics industry is bustling. More than 14,500 automatons were delivered last year worldwide, up from around 3,000 in 2024, according to company reports and estimates from Omdia, a research firm.
Moya, DroidUp’s new biomimetic robot looks and feels uncannily human, with warm skin and subtle facial expressions, making it as creepy as it is advanced.
The streets of China were buzzing with excitement as the country celebrated the Chinese Lunar New Year. However, a group of humanoid kung-fu robots stole the show with their breathtaking martial arts display.
Toborlife AI announces the upcoming availability of the Unitree H2 humanoid robot in the North American market.
The carmaker is leasing robots from Oregon-based Agility Robotics to ease bottlenecks in the production lines at its second-largest plant outside Japan.
The Chinese robotics company plans to ramp up its humanoid production fourfold this year, after shipping 5,000 robots in 2025.