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This is not AI: China’s New Year gala stunned the world with its commitment and advancement in technology, featuring over a dozen cutting edge humanoid robots performing complex martial arts alongside children from prestigious Kung Fu schools

12,485 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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Are you watching the Chinese New Year Gala? The Robot Kungfu show is mind blowing!!! They just executed a coordinated martial arts routine with spatial precision, rhythm control, and dynamic balance adjustments in real time. Kung fu, one of China’s most iconic traditional art forms , performed by machines built with cutting-edge AI control systems, advanced actuators, and high-speed feedback loops. Ancient discipline meets algorithmic precision. Last year, humanoid robots stepped onto the Spring Festival Gala stage for the first time. This year, they held synchronized kung fu stances with balance that would humble half of us after leg day. And they did it live!!! On the most-watched television event on the planet. The progress in just one year is magical. That’s what we call China speed. What makes it even sweeter is where this happened. I love how the progress is integrated in culture. In celebration. In a Lunar New Year gala watched by hundreds of millions. It’s music to my ears. The robots didn’t look like they were “trying” anymore. They looked like they belonged. Their joint articulation was smoother. Their formation timing tighter. Their balance recovery almost elegant. Their choreography is expressive. That’s what happens when AI models improve, control systems get smarter, hardware stabilizes, and iteration cycles compress. One year in robotics today is not the same as one year ten years ago. It’s compounding. If this is what 12 months looks like, imagine 36. The Chinese New Year Robot Kungfu Gala is just futuristic. It was quite the statement! The future is getting better very, very fast. It was so beautiful to watch. What do you think?

Evrim Kanbur

1,551,717 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад

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 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад