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Published on 2026/07/02
TRAINING THE THING THAT COULD ONE DAY REPLACE YOU.

It may sound like an episode of Black Mirror, but it's already happening.

In several cities across India, thousands of people work wearing head-mounted cameras that record everyday tasks from a first-person perspective, such as folding a towel, peeling a mango, washing a dish, or preparing a meal. Every movement of their hands helps train the artificial intelligence that will power the next generation of humanoid robots.

Robots can't learn these skills by reading books or browsing the internet. They need to observe how we interact with the physical world. That's why every gesture, every twist of the wrist, and every small everyday action becomes valuable data.

For this work, they earn around 250 rupees an hour, a little over two U.S. dollars. For some, it's simply another source of income. For others, the feeling is unavoidable: they're teaching a machine how to do the very job that could one day replace them.

But perhaps the most interesting question comes next.




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Squirtle.






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Published on 2026/06/16
IN THE FUTURE, WE WON'T BE ABLE TO BEAT ROBOTS

Right now, humanoid robot fights are pretty lame and, honestly, a bit disappointing. Their movements still look too robotic, stiff and artificial. They lack the fluidity, natural movement and improvisation that we associate with human fighters. When you watch two of these machines facing off, it feels more like watching two expensive appliances crash into each other than witnessing a memorable fight.
But the truth is that we're probably judging a technology that's still taking its first steps.




If we look back, the first mobile phones were huge, the first video games looked like they were made with four pixels, and the first cars could barely compete with a horse. And yet, here we are. Technological progress tends to move slowly for a long time... until suddenly it seems to accelerate all at once.
And that's exactly what's happening with artificial intelligence and robotics.

The entire tech industry is fully committed to these two fields. Governments, universities, investment funds and some of the most powerful companies on the planet are pouring unimaginable amounts of money into them. Every week there's a new breakthrough. A robot that runs faster. Another that balances better. One that can learn movements by watching videos. Another that can already make decisions in real time.
Each improvement may seem small on its own, but when you add them all together, the progress becomes impossible to ignore.



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Sneakily checking out her boobs.






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Published on 2026/06/10
UNITREE ROBOTS PERFORM A CHOREOGRAPHY

Not that long ago, getting a robot to walk a few meters without falling over was already considered a major achievement. Things have changed quite a bit since then. So much so that a group of humanoid robots recently took the stage on America's Got Talent to perform a choreography set to Lady Gaga's Abracadabra.

The performance, featuring several robots from the Chinese company Unitree Robotics alongside dancer Yufei Wu, left the audience somewhere between amazed and slightly unsettled. And for good reason. The movements were perfectly synchronized, followed the rhythm of the music, and executed the routine with a level of precision that would have seemed like science fiction just a few years ago.

Beyond the TV spectacle, the performance offers a glimpse of how far humanoid robotics has come. We're not talking about artificial intelligence making decisions on its own on stage, but we are talking about machines capable of maintaining balance, coordinating complex movements, and reacting with a fluidity that is getting closer and closer to that of a human being.

What some see as a fascinating technological demonstration, others see as a small preview of a future that no longer feels quite so far away.



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ExtraBall by David
It's never too late to take an interest in fashion.






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Published on 2026/06/08
IT STILL WASN'T QUITE READY

There's nothing worse during a product presentation than watching the product itself decide to stop working in front of everyone. Somewhere inside the company there were probably engineers, technicians, or even entire departments warning that it wasn't quite ready yet, that there were still issues to solve and details to polish. But when competition is this fierce and everyone wants to lead the technological race, companies often decide to take risks rather than fall behind.

And that's exactly what seems to have happened here. While the presenter was explaining the robot's impressive capabilities to journalists and attendees, the android suddenly decided it had done enough work for one day and collapsed on stage as if it had simply run out of energy. One of those moments that no communications department ever wants to experience