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Chinese startup LimX has just unveiled its next-gen humanoid robot—a significant evolution from its CL-1,2 bots, particularly in waist and hip actuation. The hip joint design resembles that of Atlas, though the legs appear to lack Atlas's 360° rotation from below the hips.

162,085 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr •via X (Twitter)

9 Kommentare

Profilbild von AshutoshShrivastava
AshutoshShrivastavavor 1 Jahr

China ain't joking.

Profilbild von the_truth.presence
the_truth.presencevor 1 Jahr

I remember clearly when America was winning the commercial drone race 😂😂. China won them at the end with massive mass production. Now you can't mention drones without mentioning DJI 🥲. I think this will be the same scenario with commercial robotics ( especially humanoid)

Profilbild von The Humanoid Hub
The Humanoid Hubvor 1 Jahr

Manufacturing automation will hopefully bring a more level playing field. Overregulation is still a massive hurdle in the US.

Profilbild von Riad laher
Riad lahervor 1 Jahr

How can we see the integratipn of this type of tech, into the fkrm of people with disabilities.

Profilbild von The Humanoid Hub
The Humanoid Hubvor 1 Jahr

A lot of startups are pushing assistive tech at the intersection of robotics and AI.

Profilbild von the_truth.presence
the_truth.presencevor 1 Jahr

The upgrade is great 🫡. I saw another company again from china. Lus 1 robot. @TheHumanoidHub check it out

Profilbild von The Humanoid Hub
The Humanoid Hubvor 1 Jahr

It’s a nonstop robot parade! Thanks!

Profilbild von Jimmy Felon
Jimmy Felonvor 1 Jahr

Issac Asimov just shuddered

Profilbild von kevin_from_texas
kevin_from_texasvor 1 Jahr

OMG. We're doomed.

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A truly staggering number of AI-powered humanoid robots are emerging from Shenzhen, the booming Chinese tech hub. Shenzhen Dobot, which rose from a Kickstarter campaign to become an industrial automation leader, says its first humanoid robot, Atom, has entered mass production. Atom is positioned as a general-purpose cross-industry worker. Priced around $27,000, Atom boasts fine motor control that’s precise enough to pick up a cherry by the stem. Another major player is Pudu Robotics, which recently shipped its 100,000th service robot. Pudu is commercializing its wheeled and bipedal humanoids using its sizable customer base. Its flagship is the PUDU D9, a full-sized biped built to serve in places like warehouses, stores, and hotels. It sells for between $20,000 and $30,000. A newer firm, AI Squared, recently closed a funding round worth hundreds of millions of yuan to rush its Alpha Bot 2 general-purpose humanoid to market. The startup, founded in 2023, says its AI combines slow reasoning and fast motion planning so its robots can plan, talk, and move simultaneously. An even newer firm, Lumos Robotics, has reportedly raised nearly $28 million in angel funding to develop a full-stack humanoid robotics platform. The second-generation iteration of its flagship robot, the LUS 2, recently demonstrated the ability to get up from the ground in just a second. According to Lumos, the next-gen bot features upgraded actuators and sensors for athletic-level dexterity. LimX Dynamics, known for its agile quadrupeds and bipeds, just shared footage showcasing its CL-3 humanoid’s lifelike walking gait and gestures. LimX says its flagship humanoid can watch human movement videos and replicate them via motion conversion, with no hand coding required. Just a year after its establishment, the startup DIGIT has unveiled multiple lines of sci-fi-inspired humanoids. Its Starwalker robots switch between legged and wheeled locomotion to cover more than 10,000 square meters across multiple floors. They’re available in five different colors. DIGIT also has a robot named Xia Lan with a humanlike face that can show a range of expressions and emotions. The leading Chinese robotics firm UBTECH also recently introduced its first hyper-realistic humanoid robot, Una, intended for applications like customer service and event marketing. UBTECH says it’s begun mass-producing its Walker S humanoid robots that are reportedly helping assemble iPhones for Foxconn. Footage of a so-called intelligent swarm of these humanoids at a Zeekr factory shocked the world. Another EV maker, Xpeng, plans to start mass-producing its Iron humanoids in 2026. The robot reportedly stole the show during the 2025 Shanghai Auto Week. The Shenzhen firm that’s gotten the most attention outside the usual tech echo chambers is Engine AI, which is planning the world’s first full-sized humanoid robot boxing tournament.

Mike Kalil

11,408 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr