NVIDIA is powering AI-driven robots for factories and hospitals, ushering in a new era of safe and advanced automation.
No matter how sophisticated they are, robots can often be indecisive and struggle with multi-step chores in the real world.
"Humanoid robots designed for different tasks can now share a single artificial intelligence 'brain' that coordinates their actions across multiple locations simultaneously." A UK-based company has ...
Positronic Robotics has launched PhAIL, a benchmark evaluating physical AI models on commercial tasks using throughput and ...
Bill Whitaker is an award-winning journalist and 60 Minutes correspondent who has covered major news stories, domestically and across the globe, for more than four decades with CBS News. For decades, ...
Humanoid robots built for caregiving tasks are moving from research labs into real living rooms, pushed by a wave of new ...
We often imagine robots in spotless factories or research labs—perfectly calibrated, humming in harmony with code and sensors. But the real test of robotics happens outside those controlled ...
AI stacks require heavy processing and high energy use. Humanoid robots run on batteries with limited power. This makes it ...
Robots are increasingly learning new skills by watching people. From folding laundry to handling food, many real-world, ...
Techman unveils its TM Xplore I humanoid robot at Nvidia GTC 2026, showcasing AI-powered automation designed for real-world ...
AI’s concealed labor has repeatedly led us to overestimate the technology. Humanoid robots are entering a similar phase. This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI.
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 ...