-
Downing Street exerted pressure to OK Mandelson: sacked UK official
-
Pope visits Equatorial Guinea on last stop of Africa tour
-
German investor morale lowest in over 3 years on Iran war fallout
-
FedEx faces French 'genocide' complaint over Israel cargoes
-
No Iran delegation sent to US talks yet as truce expiry nears
-
Rover discovers more building blocks of life on Mars
-
Russia, North Korea connect road bridge ahead of summer opening
-
'Strangled': Pakistan faces economic imperative in Iran war peace push
-
Michael Jackson fans pack Hollywood for biopic premiere
-
Turkey arrests 110 coal miners on hunger strike
-
Associated British Foods to spin off Primark clothes brand
-
Pope visits Eq. Guinea on last stop of Africa tour
-
Hello Kitty's parent company to make own video games
-
Di Matteo says 'vital' for faltering Chelsea to add experience
-
Ex-Spurs star Davids condemns 'lack of quality, lack of management'
-
Turkmenistan, the gas giant increasingly dependent on China
-
Romanian AI music sensation Lolita sparks racism debate
-
Timberwolves battle back to stun Nuggets in NBA playoffs
-
Eta appointment 'no surprise' for Union Berlin's ascendant women
-
Democrats eye Virginia gains in war with Trump over US voting map
-
Tourists trickle back to Kashmir, one year after deadly attack
-
Inside the world of ultra-luxury wedding cakes
-
Chinese AI circuit board maker soars on Hong Kong debut
-
Oil prices dip, most stocks rise on lingering Iran peace hopes
-
Tim Cook's time as Apple chief marked by profit absent awe
-
Mitchell, Harden shine as Cavs down Raptors for 2-0 series lead
-
El Salvador's missing thousands buried by official indifference
-
Trump's Fed chair pick to face lawmakers at key confirmation hearing
-
PGA Tour to scrap Hawaii opening events from 2027
-
Amazon invests another $5 bn in Anthropic
-
Israel PM vows 'harsh action' against soldier vandalising Jesus statue in Lebanon
-
New Report Reveals Widespread Misunderstanding of Consumer Messaging App Security Across Government and Critical Infrastructure
-
Wembanyama wins NBA defensive player of the year
-
'The Devil Wears Prada 2' stars reunite for glamorous premiere
-
El Salvador holds mass trial of nearly 500 alleged gang members
-
Apple's Tim Cook to step down as CEO in September
-
West Ham's draw at Palace relegates Wolves, piles pressure on Spurs
-
Canadian tourist killed in Mexico archaeological site shooting
-
Wolves relegated from Premier League
-
Oil jumps on Hormuz tensions, stocks mostly retreat
-
Colombian environmental activist honored amid threats and exile
-
Gun battle traps more than 200 tourists at Rio viewpoint
-
Alcaraz may skip French Open rather than rush injury comeback
-
Top US court to hear case of Catholic schools excluded from state funding
-
Trump Fed chair pick to vow interest rate independence at key hearing
-
EU to host Taliban officials for talks on deporting Afghans
-
Blue Origin probing rocket's failure to deliver satellite
-
Wembanyama 'changing the game as we speak', says Nowitzki
-
Swiss football club turn down Kanye West concert approach
-
Leicester fairytale turns sour as relegation to third tier looms
Rise of the robots: the promise of physical AI
A pair of swivelling, human-like robotic arms, built for physical artificial intelligence research, mirror the motions of an operator in a VR headset twirling his hands like a magician.
With enough practice, arms like these can complete everyday tasks alone, says Tokyo company Enactic, which is developing humanoid robots to wash dishes and do laundry in short-staffed Japanese care homes.
Welcome to the future of AI as it starts to infiltrate the material world in the form of smart robots, self-driving cars and other autonomous machines.
"The next wave of AI is physical AI," Jensen Huang, head of US chip giant Nvidia, said last year.
That's "AI that understands the laws of physics, AI that can work among us" and understands "how to perceive the world", Huang added.
Tech firms are pouring massive sums into physical AI, and Morgan Stanley predicts the world could have more than a billion humanoid robots by 2050.
The buzz is only heightened by videos showing advanced androids, often Chinese-made, dancing to Taylor Swift or pulling heavy objects with ease.
Beyond the promise of sci-fi robot butlers, the race has sparked concern over job losses, privacy and how long these innovations will take to actually be useful.
Hiro Yamamoto is the 24-year-old CEO of Enactic, whose OpenArm physical AI training devices are used by Nvidia and at top universities such as Stanford.
He plans to begin deploying new robots, currently under development, from next summer to "live alongside people in environments that are very chaotic, and where conditions are always changing" like care homes.
"So it has to be safe," with a soft exterior that won't injure anyone, Yamamoto said.
- 'Any human role' -
In the Chinese city of Guangzhou, a female figure with a glowing oval-shaped visor for a face, clad in white woven fabric like a fencing athlete, walked slowly across a stage last week to cheers and whispers.
It was the latest humanoid robot to be unveiled by Chinese electric vehicle maker XPeng, which is also pushing into physical AI.
Nimble machines made by US companies, such as Boston Dynamics' dog-like robots, have grabbed headlines over the years.
But government support and strong domestic supply chains are helping Chinese rivals, also including Unitree Robotics and EngineAI, race ahead.
"I haven't given much thought to how many robots we will sell annually in 10 years' time, but I think it would be more than cars," XPeng CEO He Xiaopeng told reporters.
XPeng's robots walk and even dance autonomously -- but how well they handle objects, a more complicated feat, has not been widely demonstrated.
Their dexterous fingers and flexible skin are unlikely to replace workers on China's factory floors soon, He said.
The cost of one robot hand, which needs to be replaced regularly for heavy-duty work, could pay a Chinese worker's salary for years.
But with enough data and training, AI humanoid robots could one day perform "almost any human role", from nanny to home chef or gardener, XPeng co-president Brian Gu told AFP.
- On-the-job training -
Text-based AI tools like ChatGPT are trained on huge volumes of words, but physical AI models must also grapple with vision and the spatial relationship between objects.
For now, remotely operating AI robots to teach them how to do something like picking up a cup "is by far the most reliable way to collect data", Yamamoto said.
Just 30 to 50 demonstrations of each task are needed to fine-tune "vision-language-action" AI models, he added.
Enactic has approached several dozen care facilities in Japan to propose that its teleoperated robots take over menial tasks, so qualified care workers have more time to look after elderly residents.
This on-the-job experience will train physical AI models so the robots can act autonomously in future, Yamamoto said.
US-Norwegian startup 1X is taking a similar approach for its humanoid home helper NEO, which it will deliver to American homes from next year.
NEO costs $20,000 to buy, but so far its performance is shaky, with one video in US media showing the robot struggling to close a dishwasher door, even when teleoperated.
- Physical limits -
In another embarrassing moment, a Russian humanoid robot, said to be the country's first, staggered then fell flat on its face as it made its debut on stage earlier this week.
There is currently a "big gap" between robots' AI systems and their physical abilities, which lag behind, said Sara Adela Abad Guaman, assistant professor in robotics at University College London.
"Nature has shown us that in order to adapt to the environment, you need to have the right body," Abad told AFP, giving the example of a mountain goat that stumbles on ice.
Nevertheless, big deals are being struck, even as booming investment in artificial intelligence feeds fears of a stock market bubble.
Japan's SoftBank recently called physical AI its "next frontier" as it said it was buying industrial robot maker ABB Robotics for $5.4 billion.
Automation raises questions about the future of human labour, but Abad is not too worried.
At the end of the day, "our sense of touch is incomparable," she said.
C.Kreuzer--VB