Sunday Robotics has a new way to train robots to do common household tasks. The startup plans to put its fully autonomous ...
Starting November 19th, 2025, Sunday will accept applications for Memo’s Founding Family Beta, launching in late 2026. Fifty households will become early adopters, receiving individually numbered ...
We surveyed our nearly half a million WhatsApp followers about 1X Neo robot and potential privacy concerns. Here's what we learned and why, perhaps, these worries are overblown.
Humanoid robots have officially arrived... sort of. Companies are wheeling out sleek, expensive prototypes with human-like limbs, while cooing PR departments promise a future where your home is ...
Home robot offerings are becoming more abundant. But, with the notable exception of robot vacuums, few have "beep-booped" their way into the mainstream. As a smart home and home security expert, I ...
🛍️ The 52 best Walmart Black Friday deals to shop right now (updating) 🛍️ By Mack DeGeurin Published Aug 4, 2025 3:00 PM EDT Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, ...
A 17-year-old student from Uttar Pradesh has built an AI robot teacher that can speak, answer classroom questions and teach ...
NEW YORK, Feb. 28, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Tuya Smart (NYSE: TUYA, HKEX: 2391), a global AI cloud platform service provider, has integrated the DeepSeek large language model into its AIoT platform, ...
Singapore, April 10, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- SIMPPLE Ltd. (NASDAQ: SPPL) (“SIMPPLE” or “the Company”), a leading technology provider and innovator in the facilities management (FM) sector, today ...
The 1X Neo can do the dishes, clean the kitchen, even fold laundry. WSJ’s Joanna Stern spent time with the humanoid—and its creator—to see what it can really do and how much still requires a human ...
Last month, Apple offered up more insight into its consumer robotics work via a research paper that argues that traits like expressive movements are key to optimizing human-robot interaction. “Like ...
Everything is now a tech thing. In creative and humorous videos, WSJ senior personal tech columnist Joanna Stern explains and reviews the products, services and trends that are changing our world.
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