DROIDS Newsletter

Diana Wolf Torres

Daily robotic news.

  1. Turning Cleaning Crews Into Training Data for Humanoid Robots

    3d ago

    Turning Cleaning Crews Into Training Data for Humanoid Robots

    Welcome to the DROIDS Newsletter daily update for June 10, 2026... A quick reminder this news is selected by a human and read by an AI. Singapore-based YY Group Holding is deploying Unitree G1 humanoid robots across commercial facilities in Asia, targeting cleaning and maintenance as an early use case. The Unitree G1 platform offers agile bipedal mobility, touch-sensitive hands, and runs on NVIDIA’s Jetson Orin, positioning it for real-time operation in environments like malls and hotels. Rather than treating humanoids as a drop-in replacement, YY Group is equipping its cleaning staff with data-collection gear to record real-world workflows on site. Those shifts generate structured datasets that are used to train the robots for autonomous sanitation and basic maintenance tasks, with robots tied into the company’s workforce platform YY Circle and its facility management system 24IFM. The initiative builds on a new Humanoid Robotics Training Lab in Singapore and an AI training data platform that taps a reported 500,000 workers across 12 countries. In a humanoid market where Chinese manufacturers such as Unitree already account for most global shipments and costs are falling quickly, YY Group is positioning itself less as a robotics hardware buyer and more as a services company building a proprietary data and software layer on top of emerging physical AI. #robotics #physicalai #trainingdata #roboticnews #technews #dailyroboticnews #droidsnewsletter Tune in tomorrow for more robotics news from DROIDS Newsletter.

    2 min
  2. Airbus Unveils Helicopter With No Cockpit. Robotic News. June 9.

    4d ago

    Airbus Unveils Helicopter With No Cockpit. Robotic News. June 9.

    Airbus Unveils U145 Autonomous Helicopter With No Cockpit Airbus Helicopters has unveiled the U145, an autonomous, uncrewed version of its widely used H145 helicopter. The aircraft made its debut this week at the ILA Berlin Air Show, where Airbus displayed a full-scale mock-up of the new platform. Unlike the conventional H145, the U145 has no physical cockpit. Airbus has removed the pilot compartment entirely and redesigned the aircraft around cargo transport and autonomous operations. The helicopter will rely on a specialized sensor suite and artificial intelligence systems to navigate and complete missions without a crew onboard. The U145 is not a clean-sheet design. Instead, Airbus is building on the existing H145 platform, one of the world’s most established light twin-engine helicopters. More than 1,800 H145 aircraft are currently in service globally, with over 8.5 million flight hours logged. Airbus says the aircraft is being developed primarily for high-volume cargo missions. To support that role, the U145 includes an integrated nose-loading door, a foldable loading table, and a dedicated cargo floor. The company also describes the aircraft as a multi-mission platform that could eventually support disaster response, firefighting, surveillance, reconnaissance, and military resupply operations. A first flight with a safety pilot onboard is planned before the end of 2026. Airbus is targeting entry into service at the beginning of the next decade. The announcement reflects a broader trend across aerospace: rather than designing entirely new aircraft, manufacturers are increasingly converting proven vehicles into autonomous systems. Airbus has already followed a similar path with its VSR700 drone helicopter program. For now, the U145 remains a prototype. But if Airbus meets its timeline, one of the world’s most recognizable helicopters may soon be flying cargo missions without a pilot onboard. #robotics #droidsnewsletter #dailyroboticnews #technews

    3 min
  3. Robotic News. June 6, 2024. NVIDIA’s Next Big Platform Isn’t a Data Center—It’s a Robot

    Jun 6

    Robotic News. June 6, 2024. NVIDIA’s Next Big Platform Isn’t a Data Center—It’s a Robot

    Today is Saturday, June 6, 2026. A reminder that DROIDS Daily News is selected and verified by a human, and then read by an AI. At GTC Taipei, NVIDIA unveiled the Isaac GR00TReference Humanoid Robot, an open platform designed to give researchers a complete humanoid development system right out of the box... The platform combines a Unitree H2 Plus humanoid body, Sharpa Wave tactile robotic hands, NVIDIA’s Jetson Thor AI computer, and the company’s Isaac GR00T software stack into a single integrated system... Researchers can use the platform for data collection, simulation, training, teleoperation, deployment, and experimentation with humanoid foundation models... Several leading institutions have already committed to using the platform, including Stanford Robotics Center, ETH Zurich, Ai2, and UC San Diego... The bigger story is NVIDIA’s strategy... Rather than building a humanoid robot of its own, NVIDIA is creating a common hardware and software foundation that researchers and robot makers can build upon. In many ways, it resembles the role that standardized PC architectures played in accelerating personal computing... If researchers, startups, and manufacturers converge on the same tools, data pipelines, simulation environments, and AI models, humanoid development could accelerate significantly... In AI, NVIDIA became the company that everyone builds on... Now it’s trying to do the same thing for robots. Tune in tomorrow for more robotics news...

    2 min
  4. Robotic News. June 5. BYD Enters Humanoid Market. Who's Laughing Now?

    Jun 5

    Robotic News. June 5. BYD Enters Humanoid Market. Who's Laughing Now?

    BYD is pushing into humanoid robotics as a new core business, with Executive Vice President Stella Li announcing the Chinese automaker is “advancing independent research and development of humanoid robots in full force,” according to remarks reported on May 26. Li said humanoid robots will become a core business track for BYD alongside its new energy vehicle operations. The company’s initial deployment will focus on its global 4S dealership network, where robots will handle sales guidance and customer reception duties, providing what BYD described as “new support for the intelligent transformation of its retail outlets.” From Factory Floor to Showroom The robotics push builds on BYD’s “Yao-Shun-Yu” project, which was first launched in late 2024 under the company’s 15th Division. BYD had already begun deploying robots in production environments in 2025, and the company showcased a robot at the Brussels Motor Show in January 2026 that “sparked conversations” with visitors. Li argued that BYD’s automotive manufacturing expertise gives it an edge in the robotics race. “The complex software systems and precision hardware manufacturing experience accumulated in the automotive industry can be directly transferred to robot development, drastically minimizing challenges in technological breakthroughs,” she said. Household Ambitions Beyond dealerships, Li outlined longer-term plans for robots to enter homes, taking on daily tasks such as cleaning, cooking, and companionship — building what BYD calls “a full-scenario intelligent service ecosystem.” The announcement comes as Chinese companies increasingly dominate the global humanoid robotics landscape. At CES 2026, 58 percent of humanoid robot exhibitors were Chinese firms. In May 2026, the city of Hangzhou deployed 15 humanoid robots for traffic management, marking another milestone in China’s push to commercialize the technology. BYD’s robotics ambitions arrive at a complex moment for the company, which recently reported a sharp decline in profits even as it expands aggressively into new markets and technologies. Additional Reading for Inquisitive Minds: Humanoid. BYD humanoid robot development confirmed, dealer sales considered. June 4, 2026. CNEV Post. BYD enters humanoid robot market, may sell through dealer network. June 3, 2026. Carbon Credits. BYD Overtakes Tesla as World’s Biggest EV Seller in 2025. January 7, 2026. Car Scoops. BYD Sold 700,000 Electrified Cars Last Quarter And Still Lost More Than Half Its Profit. May 1, 2026. Forbes. Is China About To “BYD” Tesla’s Humanoid Dreams? February 20, 2026. CNN Business. Elon Musk once mocked China’s BYD. Now it’s running circles around Tesla. May 30, 2024. Editor’s Note: This daily script is carefully researched, selected and checked by a human, and read by an AI. #robotics #roboticsnews #dailyroboticnews #tesla #optimus #byd #humanoids

    4 min
  5. Robotic News. June 4. Bots Outnumber Humans Now

    Jun 4

    Robotic News. June 4. Bots Outnumber Humans Now

    Automated bot traffic has surpassed human traffic on the internet for the first time, Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince announced on June 3. According to Cloudflare’s Radar dashboard, bots now account for 57.5% of all HTTP requests directed at HTML content, while human-generated traffic has fallen to 42.5%. A Milestone Arrived Early“Welp, that happened faster than I predicted,” Prince wrote on X. “Thought it would be end of 2027, then early 2027, but agentic traffic growing so fast that bots have now passed human traffic online for the first time in the Internet’s history.” The crossover arrived roughly eighteen months ahead of Prince’s original forecast. At SXSW in March, the Cloudflare chief had predicted bot traffic would overtake humans by 2027, citing the rapid expansion of generative AI systems that can visit far more websites than any person. He illustrated the gap with a simple comparison: a human shopping for a digital camera might visit five websites, while an AI agent performing the same task could hit a thousand. The milestone underscores broader industry concerns about the internet’s shifting composition. A March report from cybersecurity firm Human Security separately found that automated traffic was growing eight times faster than human usage, with CEO Stu Solomon telling CNBC that “the internet was fundamentally conceived with the idea that a human operates the device, and that conception is being swiftly transformed.”[cnbc] Cloudflare powers approximately 20% of all websites and is used by roughly 80% of sites that employ a reverse proxy service, giving the company an unusually broad view of global web traffic patterns. The data raises questions for digital advertising, web infrastructure, and search — industries built on the assumption that the entity on the other end of a request is a person. Prince offered no indication the trend would slow, with AI agents becoming more capable and autonomous with each generation of models deployed. #roboticsnews #droidsnewsletter

    2 min

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Daily robotic news.