(TMX) -- Boston Dynamics on Wednesday unveiled the latest version of its Atlas humanoid robot, featuring an upgrade from hydraulic actuation to fully electric, and designed for real-world applications ...
Atlas is dead, long live Atlas. The hydraulically-articulated version of Boston Dynamics' humanoid robot was retired last week in favor of its electric motor-driven version introduced on Wednesday.
Boston Dynamics hit everyone with a curve ball when it announced the retirement of its long-standing humanoid robot Atlas, only to introduce its next-gen model a few days later. Along with a ...
After 11 years, Boston Dynamics is retiring its iconic 330-pound bipedal robot and replacing it with a lighter, all electric little sibling. By Mack DeGeurin Published Apr 17, 2024 11:07 AM EDT Add ...
Humanoid robotics is entering a defining year. What once looked like a lab curiosity is increasingly shaped by real deployments, ...
In this panel, experts will cut through the hype to examine what humanoids can realistically accomplish in factories and warehouses today.
Boston Dynamics Inc., the robotics startup famed for its advanced humanoid and dog-like robots that went viral in years gone by for their acrobatic movements and dances, today announced it’s retiring ...
When Boston Dynamics announced on Tuesday it was retiring the hydraulic version of Atlas, there were a few hints that the company wasn't done with humanoid robots entirely. Sure enough, one day later, ...
Boston Dynamics turned heads when it launched the Atlas way back in 2013. The humanoid robot could run, jump and dance, and the meme-worthy videos it produced have gobbled up tens of millions of views ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results