German city’s Sinfoniker says aim is not to replace humans but to play music
human conductors would find impossible
She’s not long on charisma or passion but keeps perfect rhythm and is never
prone to temperamental outbursts against the musicians beneath her three batons.
Meet MAiRA Pro S, the next-generation robot conductor who made her debut this
weekend in Dresden.
Her two performances in the eastern German city are intended to show off the
latest advances in machine maestros, as well as music written explicitly to
harness 21st-century technology. The artistic director of Dresden’s Sinfoniker,
Markus Rindt, said the intention was “not to replace human beings” but to
perform complex music that human conductors would find impossible.
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Tag - Robots
Tesla and others are trying to infuse robots with artificial intelligence, yet
their development is dogged by technical and safety challenges. But the dream of
a multipurpose domestic droid lives on
In 2013, US robotics company Boston Dynamics revealed its new robot, Atlas.
Unveiled at the Darpa Robotics Challenge, the 6ft 2in humanoid could walk on
uneven ground, jump off boxes, and even climb stairs. It was like a vision
frequently depicted in fiction: a robot designed to operate like us, able to
take on all manner of everyday tasks. It seemed like the dawn of something.
Robots were going to do all of our boring and arduous chores, and step up as
elderly care workers to boot.
Since then, we’ve seen leaps forward in artificial intelligence (AI), from
computer vision to machine learning. The recent wave of large language models
and generative AI systems opens up new opportunities for human-computer
interaction. But outside of research labs, physical robots remain largely
restricted to factories and warehouses, performing very specific tasks, often
behind a safety cage. Home robots are limited to vacuum cleaners and lawnmowers
– not exactly Rosie the Robot.
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Billionaire says Optimus will start performing tasks for carmaker in 2025 and
could be ready for sale in 2026
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The Tesla chief executive, Elon Musk, has claimed the company will produce
“genuinely useful” humanoid robots to start working in its factories next year.
The world’s richest person, who has a penchant for making overambitious claims
on social media, posted on his platform X, formerly Twitter, that he also hoped
to expand into “high production” mode to make robots with a humanlike form
available sell to other companies in 2026.
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