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Holy…S🤯 AGIBOT's upcoming A3 humanoid robot. I'm speechless… Continuous mid-air side kicks, continuous side flips while touching the floor, mid-air backflips... Did they take all the Chinese Kungfu secrets for training?

104,676 次观看 • 5 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

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🚨🚨🚨 BREAKING: The B-21 RAIDER was just caught REFUELING MID-AIR over California. First known footage. 5-hour flight. And they WANTED you to see it. Here's why this changes EVERYTHING: → The B-21 Raider costs $700M+ PER UNIT → It's America's FIRST new stealth bomber in 30 years → Designed to replace the B-2 Spirit → Can carry nuclear AND conventional payloads → Undetectable by ANY known air defense system on Earth → Range: 6,000+ miles WITHOUT refueling → With mid-air refueling? UNLIMITED. That last point is the game changer. A stealth bomber that can refuel mid-air from a KC-135 tanker means ONE thing: 💀 It can reach ANY target on Earth without EVER landing 💀 No forward base needed 💀 No allied airfield required 💀 No diplomatic permission necessary 💀 Launch from Missouri, strike ANYWHERE, return home This isn't a test flight. This is a DEMONSTRATION. ⚠️ China just deployed its J-20 stealth fighters across the Pacific ⚠️ Russia's S-500 air defense was supposed to be "unbeatable" ⚠️ Iran has been hardening underground nuclear sites for YEARS ⚠️ The B-21 was built to penetrate ALL of them They're showing you a plane refueling mid-air. They're NOT showing you that this bomber can loiter for 40+ HOURS over enemy territory, completely invisible, waiting for a single command. They're NOT showing you that the Air Force plans to build 100+ of these at $700M each — a $70 BILLION fleet. They're NOT showing you that this is the aircraft that makes EVERY underground bunker on Earth obsolete. The old rules of warfare required bases near the enemy. Aircraft carriers. Allied territory. The B-21 Raider just ERASED those rules. One plane. One tanker. Any target on the planet. 🔔 Follow for real-time defense intelligence breakdowns.

JinWoo Kim, IQ 289

667,531 次观看 • 4 个月前

Not a preplanned motion sequence. A robot deciding mid-jump what to do next. [📍 paper + demo] Researchers just showed a humanoid doing real parkour using only onboard perception. No motion script, no fixed obstacle layout. The system is called Perceptive Humanoid Parkour (PHP). Instead of memorizing a path, the robot reads depth from its cameras and continuously chooses actions. Step, vault, climb, or roll depending on what geometry appears in front of it. To make that possible, they combine three ideas: First, they stitch together human motion clips into long movement references so the robot learns fluid transitions instead of isolated tricks. Second, they train tracking policies with reinforcement learning so contacts land at the right time and the robot keeps balance during dynamic moves. Finally, everything is distilled into one perception policy that runs directly from depth input to action selection. The result on a Unitree G1: about 3 m/s vaults wall climbs up to 1.25 m nearly one minute continuous obstacle traversal adapting when obstacles move What matters is not the tricks. It is the shift in capability. Earlier humanoids executed motions. This one navigates situations. Once robots react to geometry instead of replaying trajectories, environments stop needing to be predictable. Warehouses, homes, and outdoors suddenly become the same problem. Thanks for sharing, Zhen Wu! Paper + demo: ——— Weekly robotics and AI insights. Subscribe free:

Ilir Aliu

22,080 次观看 • 4 个月前

Video: World’s first humanoid robot labor that swaps its own batteries to work endlessly | Jijo Malayil, Interesting Engineering Walker S2 uses dual-battery balancing and standardized modules to boost efficiency and ensure uninterrupted, optimized performance. In a leap for robotics, China’s UBTech has unveiled the Walker S2, the world’s first humanoid robot capable of fully autonomous battery swapping. Designed for non-stop industrial operations, the Walker S2 can replace its own power pack in just three minutes—no human intervention required. Equipped with advanced anthropomorphic bipedal locomotion and a hot-swappable battery system, Walker S2 is built to operate 24/7 across dynamic industrial environments. According to UBTech, the next-generation humanoid robot marks a major milestone in automation, bringing continuous, hands-free performance to the factory floor. In May 2025, UBTech Robotics and Huawei Technologies inked a significant partnership to accelerate the adoption of humanoid robots across China’s factories and households. Uninterrupted robot operations A video posted by the robotics firm opens with the sleek UBTech Walker S2 humanoid robot working in an industrial setting. The highlight, however, is its autonomous battery swap. Walker S2 approaches the charging station, carefully detaches its depleted power pack, and seamlessly installs a fresh one—all within about three minutes—without any human assistance, according to CGTN. The camera captures close-ups of the robot’s articulated limbs and the intelligent battery-handling mechanism, conveying precision and reliability. As the swap completes, Walker S2 resumes its duties, reinforcing the promise of uninterrupted, 24/7 operations in dynamic factory environments. UBTech’s Walker S2 humanoid robot is equipped with advanced dual-battery power balancing technology and uses standardized battery modules to optimize performance, reports CNEVPOST. This dual-battery system allows the robot to automatically switch to a backup battery in case of a main battery failure, ensuring that critical tasks are carried out without interruption. In addition to battery swapping, the robot can intelligently choose between charging and swapping based on task urgency, allowing it to manage energy dynamically and adapt to real-time operational demands. UBTech highlights these features as a step forward in deploying humanoid robots for industrial and domestic applications, combining flexibility, reliability, and autonomy in one intelligent platform. Factory intelligence upgrade Earlier in the year, UBTech unveiled a major advancement in humanoid robot collaboration, claiming the world’s first deployment of multiple humanoids working together across varied industrial tasks. Demonstrated at Zeekr’s 5G-enabled smart factory, the breakthrough centers on UBTech’s “BrainNet” framework, which orchestrates cooperative behavior through a cloud-device intelligence system. BrainNet integrates a “super brain” for high-level decision-making with an “intelligent sub-brain” for distributed multi-robot control. The super brain, powered by a proprietary large-scale multimodal reasoning model, handles complex production-line scheduling and decision-making. Meanwhile, the sub-brain coordinates real-time tasks using cross-field perception and Transformer-based control for dynamic adaptability. Together, they enable the Walker S1 humanoid robots to move beyond isolated operations and perform coordinated tasks with high precision and speed. The system is built on DeepSeek-R1 reasoning technology and trained on real-world data from automotive factory settings. Leveraging Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG), the model adapts to specific job functions and improves scalability across workstations. At Zeekr’s facility, dozens of Walker S1s now collaborate on tasks like assembly, inspection, and part handling. Using semantic VSLAM and shared mapping, they coordinate seamlessly via vision-based navigation and agile manipulation. UBTech says this marks a transition to “Practical Training 2.0,” where humanoid robots operate as a swarm, maximizing efficiency and setting the stage for next-generation intelligent manufacturing.

Owen Gregorian

35,637 次观看 • 1 年前

LV did not become hated in China because it won an intellectual property lawsuit. Foreign companies have sued Chinese companies before. Chinese consumers understand trademark protection. They understand intellectual property. But this case crossed a different line. LV did not merely protect a brand. It exposed a much uglier logic: take ancient Chinese motifs, register them as private property, turn civilizational memory into corporate assets, then sue Chinese companies for touching patterns rooted in their own cultural soil. That is why Chinese people are furious. LV has registered 45 Chinese-style ancient patterns. Patterns that came from Chinese decorative traditions. Patterns that appear in Tang-era art, Dunhuang murals, Suzhou garden windows, Fujian floor tiles, and everyday Chinese aesthetics. And now a French luxury house acts as if these symbols belong to Paris. This is not ordinary trademark protection. This is cultural occupation through paperwork. Ancient people did not have trademark offices. They could not file applications. They could not defend their heritage in modern courts. That does not mean dead civilizations are free for corporations to loot. If this logic stands, anyone could repackage Hanfu patterns, Terracotta Warrior imagery, Dunhuang murals, Buddhist motifs, or even classical works like Journey to the West and Romance of the Three Kingdoms, register them, and then tell Chinese people they no longer have the right to use their own cultural inheritance. That is absurd. That is dangerous. And that is why LV won the lawsuit but lost China’s face. The tea brand used a jasmine flower because it sells jasmine tea. The cultural soil is Chinese. The public emotion is Chinese. The backlash is Chinese. On the day the ruling came out, Molly Tea gained massive public support because Chinese consumers understood exactly what this was: not a French brand protecting creativity, but a Western luxury house privatizing Chinese heritage and biting the people whose civilization made the pattern possible. Even more humiliating for LV: while Molly Tea was facing millions in damages, its home region was hit by floods, and the company donated 1 million yuan for disaster relief. So the contrast became clear. One side took from Chinese culture and sued. The other side bled money and still gave back to Chinese people. LV may have won US$1.5 million. But it reminded 1.4 billion people what Western luxury often means: steal civilization, monopolize beauty, sell it back as status, then sue the original owner. This has never been about luxury art design. This is colonial property logic in designer packaging.

𝘊𝘰𝘳𝘳𝘪𝘯𝘦

202,651 次观看 • 9 天前