Athletes at China’s Robot Games Fell Down a Lot
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For one thing, it’s a humanoid robot priced at under US$6,000 (£4,400). That’s not pocket change, but it’s orders of magnitude cheaper than most robots in its class, which can run into tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Two years ago, Louis Navellier, Eric Fry, and I put our heads together to create a high-conviction basket of stocks with the potential to soar 5X, even 10X, as AI reshaped the digital world. Since then,
Humanoid robots have showcased their talents at the opening ceremony of the first World Humanoid Robot Games in Beijing. The event began on Thursday evening.
Watch Boston Dynamics’ Atlas robot doing training routines, or the latest humanoids from Figure loading a washing machine, and it’s easy to believe the robot revolution is here. From the
Morgan Stanley predicts 13 million humanoid robots will work alongside humans by 2035, with costs dropping to $10,000 annually, making them as affordable as cars.
The latest humanoid robot on the market can purportedly run across a grassy lawn, do cartwheels and even fist-fight – and it costs less than $6,000. In a promotional video from China’s Unitree ...
There is no shortage of hype around AI coming for jobs, and while the U.S. labor market has begun to sputter, hard evidence of AI-related job losses is scarce.