This innovative tech showcase is another reason to attend North America’s largest automation event as it returns to Chicago The third annual Humanoid Robot Forum will be featured as part of Automate, ...
It’s raining pilot orders at NBC. The network will take a chance on two new drama projects, titled “Puzzled” and “What the Dead Know.” This caps off a week in which NBC announced six pilot orders for ...
“Call Me Ishmaelle,” by Xiaolu Guo, audaciously revises Herman Melville’s American classic. By William Giraldi William Giraldi is the author of five books. His second memoir, “Pure Jersey,” is ...
Call me disappointed. It is not impossible to adapt or reimagine “Moby-Dick.” Herman Melville’s narrative is the polar epic of modern consciousness: on the one extreme, Ishmael’s adrift apathy, that ...
Robots have always been part of CES. For years, they have danced, played games, and entertained crowds on the show floor. But at CES this year, something feels different. Humanoid robots are no longer ...
(The Center Square) - Make way for the robots. Artificial intelligence is front and center at the famed Consumer Electronics Show, which took over Las Vegas this week at multiple venues. AI is part of ...
At the CES trade show in Las Vegas this week, robots poured coffee, played ping pong, dealt poker hands and folded laundry — all within a few feet of one another. Human-inspired robots, aptly called ...
CLOiD, LG's robot butler, was unveiled on the CES show floor. We saw it do some light baking, laundry folding and milk fetching. David Watsky Managing Editor / Home and Kitchen David lives in Brooklyn ...
The annual consumer electronics extravaganza known as CES kicked off in Las Vegas this week with prominent contributions from a couple of local tech stalwarts. Together they represent two of the ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. Guo’s recasting of Ishmaelle is no exception. Orphaned as a teenager in an impoverished fishing village in Kent, ...
“The Melville boom,” the critic Van Wyck Brooks wrote in 1921, is “only a question of time.” By the 1930s the prediction had been borne out; after decades of neglect, “Moby-Dick” (1851) was widely ...