
As you'd expect, there were robots aplenty at the AI Engineer World's Fair Expo, although with mixed...
As you'd expect, there were robots aplenty at the AI Engineer World's Fair Expo, although with mixed results.
Many companies had little four-wheeled box robots, such as those used to deliver shopping in some cities. One would dispense small swag gifts in exchange for a QR code, while others just jerked around the floor, stopping and starting to avoid running people over.
Those that garnered the most attention were the humanoid bipeds, but this proved to be a mixed blessing. While they were attracting a lot of attention, it wasn't always the best kind. We observed numerous delegates having great fun trying to push them over.
This seems a tad rude and, judging from the picture, at least one was left broken in a tangle of limbs. Its compadre was all right, however, and was in the traditional kneeling pose while it recharged, or "praying to the great power socket," as one wag put it.

aiMost of us have seen a coding agent fail to complete a task we know it can do. We just don't...
googlecloudWhen building Generative AI applications, developers often encounter a massive bottleneck: sequential...
discussI’ve been thinking about sharing some electronic circuit posts on Dev.to — small circuits, DIY...
agentsWhat nobody tells you about exporting your multi-agent prototype to a local workspace. Every...
agenticarchitectAutonomous agents are genuinely good at answering messy business questions. Give one an LLM and a set...
aiPR volume went up, ticket quality didn't, and the gap got filled with LLMs on both sides of the review: bots reviewing, bots replying, bots occasionally arguing with bots about priorities that only existed in a teammate's head. Our CEO named the actual problem, and it's bigger than code review.
Workflows from the Neura Market marketplace related to this Stable Diffusion resource