From homemakers in Chennai to textile factory workers in Tamil Nadu, people are filming themselves performing routine activities such as cooking, folding clothes, sewing, ironing, and sorting objects ...
The exercise reflects a growing global push by AI and robotics companies to gather what’s being called “egocentric data” — first-person recordings of human activity that can teach machines how people ...
AI is helping firms forecast demand, design products, inspect quality, monitor machines and track production. Artificial intelligence and automation are no longer distant possibilities. They are ...
With a smartphone strapped to her head, Nagireddy Sriramyachandra films herself slicing mangoes in her kitchen in India to ...
BOSTON, United States — They can mix cocktails, run marathons and fold laundry. But humanoid robots are still a long way from ...
The Indian workers training AI robots to take their jobs ...
A surprising scene unfolded in front of press at the Korea Federation of Textile Industries’ office in Seoul’s Gangnam ...
ZHANGJIAGANG, China — In an industrial park in Zhangjiagang, a small city on China's east coast, a large humming and hissing machine feeds on piles of used clothes and sorts them. The novelty? It uses ...
They can mix cocktails, run marathons and fold laundry. But humanoid robots are still a long way from doing lots of different jobs on command, whatever the marketing says. The gap was easy to spot at ...
Developers think feeding first-person footage, called " egocentric data", into specialised AI models will help robots copy ...