エピソード

  • Ukraine’s Robot War: Fiction vs. Reality
    2026/04/29

    We tend to imagine war robots as autonomous machines marching into battle.

    Ukraine is showing something very different.

    In this episode, we take a closer look at how unmanned ground vehicles are actually being used on the battlefield. Not as futuristic replacements for soldiers, but as practical tools designed to move risk away from people and into machines.

    Drawing from frontline reporting and analysis from the Modern War Institute, this episode explores what it really takes to operate these systems under fire. Limited visibility. Constant electronic warfare. Broken supply chains. Field repairs just kilometers from the front.

    This is not a story about perfect technology.

    It is a story about what happens when machines are forced to work in mud, mines, and artillery fire—and why that is quietly changing the nature of war.

    #robotics #warrobots

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    23 分
  • Ace Robot Beats Humans Champions at Table Tennis
    2026/04/26

    What happens when a robotic arm spends five years training in simulation, learns to read spin at 20 milliseconds, and then steps up to the table against some of the best ping pong players in the world?

    It wins.

    Sony's Project Ace made headlines this week after a paper published in Nature confirmed what many in the robotics world had been watching closely: an AI-powered robotic arm beat elite human table tennis players under official competitive rules — and it did it using deep reinforcement learning, nine cameras, and a technique called "privileged critic" training.

    But here's what the viral video doesn't tell you: Sony didn't build this robot to play ping pong. They built it to prove that physical AI can handle the unpredictable, high-speed chaos of the real world. And that has implications far beyond the table. This podcast was created using Google's NotebookLM and features AI-generated hosts. #robotics #sonyace

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    25 分
  • How PSYONIC Turns Human Hands into Robot Training Data
    2026/04/10

    This is one of the hardest problems in robotics: hands.

    PSYONIC is solving it by using human data, capturing touch, grip, and dexterity, and transferring it to robots.

    Alex Wolf Torres, Associate Editor, DROIDS, spoke with Dr. Aadeel Akhtar and Dale DiMassi from PSYONIC at NVIDIA GTC. Dale is a bionic hand user himself. As a user of the bionic hand, DiMassi discussed the device's capabilities.

    #robotics #physicalAI #bionics #NVIDIAGTC

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    6 分
  • The Lobster That Built a Robot
    2026/04/07

    At NVIDIA GTC, we visited the Build-a-Claw demo to see how OpenClaw actually works in practice.

    DROIDS Associate Editor Alexander Wolf Torres speaks with NVIDIA’s Mark McKeen about how an AI agent can move from concept to robot. Starting from a simple prompt, OpenClaw proposes designs, iterates on hardware, and trains control policies in simulation.

    In this case, it produced a tracked robot with a claw. When asked why, it had an answer.

    This conversation shows how design, simulation, and training are starting to merge into a single loop, with the agent actively participating in the process.

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    5 分
  • Anthropic’s Crackdown on the Claw's endless appetite
    2026/04/07

    Somewhere, 135,000 agents hit a wall at noon on a Saturday. Turns out $20 a month doesn't cover an always-on AI coworker.

    Anthropic cut off Claude Pro and Max subscribers from routing their flat-rate plans through third-party agent frameworks. OpenClaw first. The rest shortly behind it. Roughly 60% of the 135,000-plus active OpenClaw instances were running on subscription credits. That’s the size of the subsidy Anthropic was absorbing on every session.

    The infrastructure math checks out. OpenClaw bypasses Anthropic’s prompt-caching optimizations. A single heavy session consumes infrastructure that, at standard API rates, runs $1,000 to $5,000 for one day of use. A Claude Pro subscription costs $20 a month. #OpenClaw

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    20 分
  • “Home Dog” Just Got Redefined
    2026/03/28

    In this episode, I spoke with Tony Yang from Unitree to talk about what he calls the “home dog.”

    Quadrupeds may be the first robots that actually make sense in the home. They’re stable, already capable in real environments, and closer to practical use than humanoids.

    We unpack why this form factor matters and what it could mean for the future of companion robots.

    "Home dogs" are coming and soon.

    #homedogs #physicalai #robotics

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    2 分
  • Robotics News: March 13, 2026.
    2026/03/14

    Tesla doubles down on Optimus Gen 3, shifting Fremont from cars to humanoid robots and signaling a long‑term pivot from EVs to physical AI. Rivian spin‑out Mind Robotics raises a massive $500M to deploy non‑humanoid industrial robots this year, betting that boring, reliable automation still delivers the fastest ROI. We also break down the latest capability demos from Boston Dynamics’ Atlas and CES humanoids, and I share which robotics companies and ecosystems I’ll be watching on the ground at NVIDIA GTC.

    #droidsnewsletter #dianawolftorres #nvidiagtc2026

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    3 分
  • Robotics News: March 11, 2026
    2026/03/11

    Industrial robotics is reaching an economic tipping point and reshaping factory strategies, while humanoid robots are edging closer to real deployments. In this episode of DROIDS, Diana breaks down Hyundai’s factory‑first Atlas roadmap, Honor’s push to turn phones and humanoids into a single AI ecosystem, and why 2026 is being framed as the year automation shifts from “nice‑to‑have” to “mandatory infrastructure.” She also looks at the explosive growth projections for medical robotics and the emerging ethics fight as advanced AI and robotics intersect with military and defense work. #roboticsnews

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    6 分