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Demystifying China's Dancing Robots: How Did They Catch Handkerchiefs?🇨🇳🤖 16 humanoid robots from Chinese robotics company, Unitree, took center stage at the annual #SpringFestivalGala. The robots seamlessly coordinated with 16 human dancers to perform a traditional Yangko dance, a vibrant folk art form from northeast China, blending cultural heritage...

11,169 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

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Li Jingjing 李菁菁 profil fotoğrafı
Li Jingjing 李菁菁1 yıl önce

Unitree completed the first commercial delivery of the H1 series in October 2023, with each robot priced at around 650,000 yuan (around $90,000). In May 2024, Unitree introduced the G1 series, standing at 1.27 meters tall and weighing approximately 35 kilograms, with a starting price of 99,000 yuan. However, this is not the first time that Unitree's robots have graced the Spring Festival Gala stage. In 2021, Unitree's quadruped robots appeared as dance partners for Andy Lau.

ACCIONA (English) profil fotoğrafı
ACCIONA (English)1 yıl önce

In an Australian laboratory 🇦🇺, a coral nursery is home to a robotic arm that works around the clock. This machine feeds, cleans, and nurtures young corals 🤖🪸 This is the story of the robots that help protect the environment ⤵️

bing bang profil fotoğrafı
bing bang1 yıl önce

this is what a society can be when there is not a predator class sucking out 90% of the wealth

David Johnson profil fotoğrafı
David Johnson1 yıl önce

I am waiting for the official ban of Chinese robots, dangers of TikTok are still looming and DeepSeek ruined NVIDIA and Chat GPT gov edition. Expensive data centers in the US will be staffed with H1-B visa foreigners. Trump imposed 10% tariff on Chinese products, we can't win.

RasaBrava 🐭 profil fotoğrafı
RasaBrava 🐭1 yıl önce

Where is my million dollars for the Chines COVID virus from Wuhan. Based on the data available: Directly Reported COVID-19 Deaths: Approximately 7 million. Excess Mortality Estimate: Up to 36 million deaths, considering the upper bound of a 95% confidence interval from some studies. However, this includes both direct and indirect deaths due to the broader effects of the pandemic. Total Impact (Direct + Excess): Approximately 36 million deaths when considering the upper estimate of excess mortality. And the worsts part, instead of helping the world by admitting it and using that to create vaccines and help, China lied and hid it's complicity

sen_2019 profil fotoğrafı
sen_20191 yıl önce

Boston Dynamics' robots could do this TWO years ago. Your so-called dancing robots are a joke.

Humanity First profil fotoğrafı
Humanity First1 yıl önce

Thank you so much! that was my burning question.

RasaBrava 🐭 profil fotoğrafı
RasaBrava 🐭1 yıl önce

So, Is it normal for you to have Chinese state accounts attacking people in your comments and then they delete their accounts when you call them out?

CRau080 @CRau080@mstdn.social profil fotoğrafı
CRau080 @[email protected]1 yıl önce

Their sex appeal is zero and so is their charm

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Humans are cooked. 😳 China just hosted the world's first robot-led gala show, 60 minutes of humanoid robots performing live on stage. Not a tech demo. Not a 30-second clip from a lab. A full entertainment show during the Chinese Spring Festival with 12 performances including dance, magic, comedy, martial arts, and a fashion runway. The robots did backflips. Let me say that again. The robots. Did. Backflips. AGIBOT G2 humanoid robots and D1 quadruped robots performed in perfectly synchronized formations…. rapid turns, group choreography, runway walks.. transitioning seamlessly between segments for a full hour. But here's what actually blew my mind: In one segment, human dancers performed alongside the robots in coordinated routines. Real-time alignment between human movement and robotic motion. You couldn't tell who was leading. In another, quadruped robots dressed as pandas danced with children on stage. And in the corner? A sign-language translation robot was providing barrier-free access for hearing-impaired viewers. This wasn't entertainment. This was a statement. Some context most people are missing: AGIBOT shipped over 5,000 humanoid robots in 2025. They're ranked #1 globally in humanoid robot shipments. The company was founded by a former Huawei "Genius Youth" engineer just 3 years ago. Three. Years. Meanwhile, Boston Dynamics has been at it for 32 years and still doesn't have a consumer product on the market. China isn't just catching up in robotics. They're lapping us while doing backflips. And the craziest part? You can now rent these same robots for events through their platform, starting at 999 yuan. That's about $140. The future isn't coming. It's performing on stage, doing backflips, and it costs less than your Costco run. AGIBOT #AGIBOT NIGHT #RobotsHumanoides #ArtesMarcialesChinas

Shruti

104,721 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

Last night, China Central Television (CCTV) aired its 2026 Chinese New Year Gala celebrating the Year of the Horse. The show featured a wide range of performances, including Unitree Robotics humanoid robots performing martial arts in sync with human dancers. Just a year ago, Unitree’s robots appeared at the same gala, but their movements looked stiff and mechanical. This year, they were noticeably more fluid and coordinated — a remarkable improvement, even if they’re still likely operating under some level of remote supervision. When it comes to humanoid robotics, most of the visible momentum today seems to be coming from the U.S. and China. Companies like Tesla (with Optimus) and Boston Dynamics in the U.S., alongside rapidly advancing Chinese firms, dominate the headlines. So what happened to Europe and Japan? Japan was once seen as the global leader, especially with Honda’s ASIMO and SoftBank Robotics’ humanoid projects. However, ASIMO was retired, and much of Japan’s robotics focus shifted toward industrial automation and service robots rather than full-scale general-purpose humanoids. Europe, meanwhile, remains strong in industrial robotics, research, and precision engineering — with players like ABB and KUKA — but hasn’t pushed aggressively into commercial humanoid platforms at the same scale or speed as the U.S. and China. In short, it’s less that Europe and Japan disappeared, and more that the center of gravity in humanoid robotics — especially AI-driven, general-purpose humanoids — has shifted toward U.S.–China competition. Whether that gap widens or narrows will depend on breakthroughs in embodied AI, cost reduction, and real-world deployment over the next few years.

Ray

23,439 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

China unveils humanoid robot with lifelike skin and blinking eyes built for daily life | Prabhat Ranjan Mishra, Interesting Engineering Large Language Models (LLMs) and Vision-Language Models (VLMs) help process and interpret complex data from human interactions. A Shanghai-based company has developed humanoid robots that appear as real as humans. The advanced bionic humanoid robot is integrated with self-supervised AI algorithms. Named Elf V1, the robot can perceive the world, communicate, learn, and interact intelligently with its surroundings. Developed by AheadForm Technology, the robot offers up to 30 degrees of freedom, powered by a precise control system and an advanced AI learning algorithm. Robot offers expressive facial features The robot offers expressive facial features, moving eyes, and synchronized speech. It can also convey emotions and understand human non-verbal cues, making interactions more natural and engaging. The robot has highly interactive capabilities and lifelike appearances. AheadForm expects that its robots could soon seamlessly integrate into daily life, providing assistance, companionship, and support across various industries. “We believe that by developing realistic and expressive robot heads, we can bridge the gap between humans and machines, fostering a new era of interactive and intelligent robotics,” said the company in a statement. Reports revealed that to avoid the “uncanny valley” effect and be able to interact with us, they are given lifelike skin and capabilities to read our emotions and respond appropriately using dynamic expression simulation and emotion generation tech. Bionic skin and high-precision control system The Elf V1 series of humanoids features 30 facial muscles animated by brushless micro-motors and managed by a high-precision control system. Paired with an ability to detect their users’ emotions with low latency and bionic skin, their facial expressions are nearly identical to those of humans, reported CGTN. The company claims it’s pioneering the development of realistic humanoid robots designed to revolutionize human-robot interaction. It’s enhancing sophisticated humanoid robot heads that can express emotions, perceive their environment, and interact seamlessly with humans. By combining cutting-edge AI and advanced robotics, AheadForm aims to bring life to machines and transform how humans engage with technology. AI models boost robots’ responsiveness Seamless integration of Large Language Models (LLMs) and Vision-Language Models (VLMs) into the humanoid robots can help them process and interpret complex data from human interactions, enabling the robot to learn and adapt in real-time, achieving human-level understanding and responsiveness. AheadForm uses Brushless Motors that deliver ultra-quiet operation and high responsiveness, specifically designed for precision facial movements in humanoid robots. With its compact size, lightweight design, and energy efficiency, this motor is the ideal choice for next-generation robots that require precise, subtle facial control to create a truly human-like experience. Previously, the company unveiled the Lan Series that features realistic humanoid robots with soft skin and 10 degrees of freedom, offering a lifelike appearance and intuitive movements. This series is designed for cost-efficiency, for applications prioritizing mobility and manipulation.

Owen Gregorian

179,005 görüntüleme • 9 ay önce