The humanoid robot that feels.

The humanoid robot that feels.




As companies compete to build the fastest, strongest robot, one Chinese company decided to attack a much more difficult problem: making a machine feel. The Senzen-based Kinetic AI company announced the humanoid Kai, a life-sized robot with a level of sensitivity and control that is beginning to approach the human body and the numbers are impressive.


There are 115 degrees of freedom of which 72 are in the hands alone, well above the average for most current humanoid robos, but what really changes the game is on the surface. Kai is covered in a synthetic skin equipped with 18,000 touch sensors capable of detecting extremely light forces in the range of 0.1 N., translated, it can perceive contact with sufficient precision to manipulate fragile objects and safely interact with people.


The hands, for example, combine active joints for precise control with passive joints that function as natural shock absorbers. This allows robots to physically adapt to the object even before the computational processing takes effect. It is as if part of the intelligence were in the body itself and that is strategic because it reduces response time and increases safety in unpredictable environments.




Kai can also carry up to 20 kg, operate for about 4 hours and reach a speed of up to 5 km/h, figures that already place robots in a functional zone for real tasks, but the most important detail is in the brain, Kinetic AI developed a system based on a world model where the robot not only reacts, but also predicts.


Before executing an action, simulate possible results, evaluate scenarios and Only then does it decide the movement, to train this behavior, the company created the Kai Halo, a wearable device that collects real human data, first-person vision, movements, interaction with objects, that is, the robot learns by watching humans live and that explains the ambition of the project.


Kai was not created for heavy industry, it was designed for services, retail and home environments, tasks like organizing products, folding clothes, carrying objects and even performing extremely delicate movements like threading a needle. Production of more is planned for the end of 2026 with an estimated price below $40,000.




Sorry for my Ingles, it's not my main language. The images were taken from the sources used or were created with artificial intelligence


Posted Using INLEO



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