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China's Tesla rival Unitree's H1 wins humanoid race at Beijing showcase

China's Tesla rival Unitree's H1 wins humanoid race at Beijing showcase

Unitree Robotics brought the spotlight-grabbing machines at Beijing's set piece robots competition on Friday, burnishing its reputation as a national champion for China's ambitions in developing AI and humanoids.
The Hangzhou-based company's H1 robot won gold in a 1,500-meter humanoid race with a listed time of 6 minutes and 35 seconds, beating the average mile time on Strava by close to four minutes. Another Unitree machine also made it to the podium in a race that highlighted day one of the World Humanoid Robot Games.
The three-day event hosted in the Chinese capital is the latest showcase for the nation's challengers to Tesla Inc. and other US companies developing products in the emerging field of advanced robotics. While Tesla's Optimus humanoid is still largely just a promise in development, Unitree's alternatives showed off various athletic feats, adding to Chinese steps forward that included a half-marathon race in April.
Mishaps continue to pervade these nascent ventures, as several robot racers tripped on the tracks and one even lost an arm. In soccer games played nearby, skills like passing and tackling were nowhere to be found, with the game played more like rugby where one robot tries to brute-force the ball into the other team's net. Many of the robots at the show also still have human operators controlling them via joysticks.
In a boxing ring set up at the center of the National Speed Skating Oval arena, contestants from local universities pit Unitree's G1 models against each other. The robots, distinguishable by colored headbands and gloves, wowed the audience with their kicks and swings.
Unitree's prominence has grown rapidly after Chief Executive Officer Wang Xingxing joined a group of tech executives including Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.'s billionaire co-founder Jack Ma in a high-profile meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping earlier this year, an event designed to highlight Beijing's support for private tech enterprise.
Hundreds more robots also joined the event on Friday. Beyond the main stage, there were demonstrations like a machine arm playing table tennis and robots on wheels shooting hoops. Two-legged humanoid competitors will compete for 26 gold medals in competitions from track and field races to soccer and kickboxing.
Nvidia Corp. boss Jensen Huang has said that robotics has the potential to grow into a multitrillion-dollar industry, while Elon Musk also sees Tesla's Optimus having the potential to generate $10 trillion in revenue. China, meanwhile, is aggressively pushing ahead in its effort to match or surpass US ventures.
Unitree's Wang said earlier this month that 'it feels like we are at a point of one to three years before ChatGPT emerged.' When the artificial intelligence required to make robots truly humanlike is ready, Beijing wants to be at the forefront and ready to capture the opportunity.
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Reddy and setting Indian motor racing on the speedway
Reddy and setting Indian motor racing on the speedway

Hindustan Times

time14 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Reddy and setting Indian motor racing on the speedway

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PBKS Star Set To Return For Asia Cup 2025, Yashasvi Jaiswal & Shubman Gill Unlikely: Report
PBKS Star Set To Return For Asia Cup 2025, Yashasvi Jaiswal & Shubman Gill Unlikely: Report

News18

time25 minutes ago

  • News18

PBKS Star Set To Return For Asia Cup 2025, Yashasvi Jaiswal & Shubman Gill Unlikely: Report

Last Updated: The 30-year-old right-handed batter played 17 matches in IPL 2025 and scored 604 runs for the Mohali-based franchise. India's Test captain Shubman Gill and star opening batter Yashasvi Jaiswal are unlikely to be part of India's Asia Cup 2025 squad, but Punjab Kings captain Shreyas Iyer will be picked for the premier continental event. According to a report in Sportstar on Sunday (August 17), Iyer, who last played a T20I match for India in Bengaluru on December 3, 2023, against Australia, will be included as a middle-order batter. In his last white-ball tournament for India, which was in the Champions Trophy 2025, Iyer played five matches in Dubai and scored 243 runs to finish as India's highest run getter. The 2025 edition of the Asia Cup is also scheduled to take place in Dubai and Abu Dhabi from September 9 to 28. It has been reported that 'selectors and team management are aligned on including an experienced middle-order batter suited to the slower, lower conditions expected in the UAE. If Shreyas is picked, it could mean a tough call on either Shivam Dube or Rinku Singh, both of whom were part of India's last T20I assignment, against England in January." Iyer, who leads Punjab Kings in the IPL and scored 604 runs in IPL 2025, has 1104 runs to his credit in 51 T20Is played so far. It has also been reported that RCB wicketkeeper-batter Jitesh Sharma will be Sanju Samson's deputy for the Asia Cup 2025. Jitesh last played a T20I match for India on January 14, 2024, in Indore against Afghanistan. Gill and Jaiswal last played a T20I match for India on July 30, 2024, against Sri Lanka in Pallekele. The duo was in red-hot form in the IPL 2025 and deserves a place in India's T20I squad by form and merit, but the players in the current T20I setup – Samson, Abhishek Sharma and Tilak Varma – haven't performed badly either, and to drop them to bring Gill and Jaiswal back makes little sense. As per Sportstar, 'The management appears inclined to stick with the core group that has excelled under Gambhir, winning 13 of 15 T20Is since his appointment." 'Additionally, with minimal turnaround time between formats—the Asia Cup final is on September 28, and the first Test against the West Indies begins on October 2 in Ahmedabad—the selectors are likely to keep Gill and Jaiswal fresh for the red-ball assignments." view comments First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

China's BIG plan to conquer the Moon, to build lunar city, settlements by 2035, develops tech to transform moondust into...
China's BIG plan to conquer the Moon, to build lunar city, settlements by 2035, develops tech to transform moondust into...

India.com

timean hour ago

  • India.com

China's BIG plan to conquer the Moon, to build lunar city, settlements by 2035, develops tech to transform moondust into...

Representational Image/AI-generated China Moon Mission: China's rapid technological advancement has dazzled the world over the last decade, and now the Asian giant has reportedly developed a technology that transforms moondust (regolith) into sturdy bricks which would be used in building houses on the moon, as Beijing plans to establish lunar settlements by 2035. What is China's 'moon bricks' technology? According to media reports, Chinese scientists have developed an advanced machine to build bricks from regolith on the surface of the moon. The machine collects moondust and superheats it a special chambers, where the high-temperatures fuse the dust particles together to form solid bricks that can be used to construct research bases and housing facilities on the moon. The technology is a major step towards establishing settlements in space as it nullifies the cost of transport construction material from Earth, as transportation for a single kilo could run into crores. How the technology works? As per experts, the machine makes bricks similar to how regular bricks are made back on Earth, by baking clay in a hot furnace. The machine heats moondust to a temperature of up to 1300 degrees Celsius by amplifying the available sunlight by 3000 times. The superheated furnace melts the dust and shapes it into durable space bricks. The machine was first tested with volcanic ash on Earth, but melting regolith is a challenging task as its composition varies in different spots on the lunar surface due to radiation exposure, temperature fluctuations and micrometeorites striking the moon. Where will the bricks be tested? China's Tianzhou-8 mission ferried a cache of regolith bricks to space where they will undergo rigorous testing for radiation and temperature effects for three years at the Tiangong Space Station. These tests are designed to determine their durability and efficacy for building installations on the moon. In 2020, China's Chang-e-5 mission brought back soil samples from the moon, and soon Chinese engineers designed a machine to create moondust bricks after studying the composition of regolith. The Chang-e-8 mission, which aims to lay the foundation of a Chinese research base on the moon, will carry the technology with it to the lunar surface in 2028. When China plans to build a lunar city? According to reports, China's Chang-E-7 mission will head to the moon in 2026 to search for water on the lunar south pole, while a manned mission is planned for 2030, and a permanent research base along with a lunar colony, is expected to be operational by 2035. Notably, China and Russia have teamed up to build a nuclear power plant on the Moon, which will power the proposed International Lunar Research Station (ILRS). The revolutionary project is expected to be completed by 2036.

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