China, humanoid robot and Lunar New Year
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Toborlife AI announces the upcoming availability of the Unitree H2 humanoid robot in the North American market.
UAE Moments on MSN
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.
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.
At this year's CMG Spring Festival Gala, the world's most-watched television broadcast, four Chinese robotics powerhouses, namely Unitree, MagicLab, Galbot and Noetix, debuted their most advanced units to date. For the robotics industry, this was far more than a cultural performance; it was a high-stakes global product launch.
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.
Humanoid robots developed by Unitree Robotics performed kung fu and backflips during China's 2026 Lunar New Year broadcast.
Figure unveils Helix 02, the AI powering its most advanced humanoid robot yet, capable of completing complex, full-body tasks without human input.
NEW YORK, Jan. 21, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- The humanoid robot industry is influenced by evolving needs in personal assistance, healthcare, and industrial automation. Trends such as AI-driven human–robot interaction, advanced mobility and dexterity, and ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Video: China’s humanoid robot masters stunning sword dance, shows perfect control
China’s Robotera has released a new video showcasing its L7 robot performing a traditional
The Chosun Ilbo on MSN
AI·robotics automate 57% of human tasks, study finds
AI (artificial intelligence) is transforming workplaces. AI chatbots searching for information and organizing documents have become a common sight in offices. Industrial sites are increasingly deploying autonomous drones to check inventory and robotic arms to assemble parts weighing dozens of kilograms.