AI robots take stage for China’s New Year celebration
Digest more
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.
In the clip from last year Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft, basically said AI will make humans obsolete in most job categories within the next ten years. Anyone in the current job market knows how real that feels.
A Shanghai startup unveiled Moya, a humanoid robot with warm skin that feels disturbingly human. The biometric AI robot is launching in 2026 for $173,000.
A Chinese robotics startup has revealed the world’s first “biomimetic AI robot”, a humanoid machine that doesn’t just look human, but tries to feel hu.
AI companions promise conversation, reminders and engagement for lonely seniors—but overreliance can pose emotional risks, and they can’t replace human connection.
Que.com on MSN
China’s dancing robots: Should we fear the rise of AI?
Videos of humanoid robots dancing in sync—often filmed in China’s tech hubs and factory floors—have gone viral for a reason:
A Shanghai-based robotics startup is going viral for its latest invention, a humanoid robot named ‘Moya’ that emits its own body heat.
Its skin is literally warm — and we're not sure we want to know why. The post This Robot With a Working Human Face Is Incredibly Unsettling appeared first on Futurism.
A new chapter in autonomous warfare unfolded in the rugged terrain of Central California this week as Scout AI Inc. pulled the curtain back on “Fury,” a foundation model designed to bridge the gap between human intent and robotic execution.