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Japan introduced a new type of robot that can "think" without input of operator's control. Honda's latest version of its signature humanoid "Asimo" arrived at the National Museum of Emerging ...
Car manufacturer Honda has been developing walking assist devices since 1999, drawing on studies of the human gait that were used to develop its humanoid robot, ASIMO ... Japan is home to the ...
The latest version of ASIMO, which stands for Advanced ... Senior Chief Engineer with Honda R&D Co., Ltd. in Japan, responsible for humanoid robotics.
Fans of technology will recall a number of years when Honda’s humanoid robot Asimo seemed to be everywhere. In addition to its day job in a research lab, Asimo had a public relations side gig ...
Honda's Asimo wowed the world in 2000 with its human-like movement. Since then, Japanese technology firms haven't taken their foot off the gas in developing humanoid robots. The Geminoid DK ...
Honda seems to have given up on taking Asimo any further. Yet just as Japan was pulling the plug, key developments were happening elsewhere. Enter a scrappy little American startup called Boston ...
While Asimo was never destined for factory work like Tesla CEO claims the Optimus robot will be one day, Honda learned a lot about human-machine interaction until Asimo was retired in 2018.
As for ASIMO, we'll be impressed when he drops the baton and picks up Yo-Yo Ma's violin to play a flawless performance of Mozart's 4th. Well here's an Aw Snap! for Honda: Toyota already built that ...
A robot on tracks brings him water while rescuers in exoskeletons clear an escape route for an autonomous stretcher to take her to safety. This is the futuristic vision on display at the Japan ...