Crowded checkpoints, multilingual questions, and unforgiving schedules make border crossings a noisier laboratory than any expo hall, and that is exactly where the latest batch of UBTech humanoids is stepping into work. In this roundup, voices from security agencies, factory operators near the
When 1,571 young innovators from 91 countries gather to build robots that think for themselves the future of autonomy looks less distant and more doable, and the setting in Singapore turns that momentum into a living lab where prototypes meet practical constraints. The scene signals a shift: youth
Everyday robots stumble not on strength or speed but on the simple chaos of new kitchens, offices, and factories where objects move, lighting shifts, and assumptions crumble between one task and the next. That predictable failure under domain shift has long slowed service and humanoid robots, even
An industry racing to make machines walk, grasp, and reason like people now faces a paradox of plenty, with capital, policy tailwinds, and supply chains generating scale faster than customers can absorb and deploy solutions at a sustainable pace across real workplaces and public services in ways
Airports across the world quietly lose time, fuel, and goodwill whenever a parked jet waits for ground power while crews juggle tight schedules, heavy cables, and unpredictable apron conditions under mounting operational pressure. The delay is small in isolation yet compounding in effect: every
Recruitment for specialist naval roles has long hinged on timely answers and credible guidance, yet many would-be submariners still encounter delays, jargon, and myths that sap motivation at the point of decision. Against that backdrop, Atlas arrived as a real-time, animated conversational avatar