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Zenger
Zenger
Technology
Dean Murray

Chinese Firm Qibo Creates World’s Fastest Human-Controlled Fighting Robots

A company say they have made the world's fastest human-controlled fighting robots. Chinese firm Qibo Robot Company hopes to pit the machines against each other in competitive sport. PHOTO BY QIBO ROBOT COMPANY/SWNS 

A company say they have made the world’s fastest human-controlled fighting robots.

Chinese firm Qibo Robot Company hopes to pit the machines against each other in competitive sport.

The Weihai-based team say they were inspired by Hugh Jackman-starring sci-fi film Real Steel, in which human boxers have been replaced by robots.

A showcase of the so-called Qibbots sees a human-controlled “tele-robot” boxing against an AI-controlled version.

The human-controlled robo-fighter is seen able to move side-to-side and move its arms at seemingly the same speed as the person controlling it.

A company say they have made the world’s fastest human-controlled fighting robots. Chinese firm Qibo Robot Company hopes to pit the machines against each other in competitive sport. PHOTO BY QIBO ROBOT COMPANY/SWNS 

Qibo Robot Company explain: “The most challenging problem in fast tele-operation is: the latency in robots’ response.

“Qibbot’s latency is about 12 milliseconds. This is extremely low compared to other tele-robots.”

Qibo say they have compared the latency of their machines against “hundreds of tele-operated robots” and believe they have the world’s fastest.

They report: “But, over 95% of today’s tele-robots have been designed for slow/medium-speed tasks.

A company say they have made the world’s fastest human-controlled fighting robots. Chinese firm Qibo Robot Company hopes to pit the machines against each other in competitive sport. PHOTO BY QIBO ROBOT COMPANY/SWNS 

“In those systems, if the operator moves quickly, the robot’s response will have an evident latency.”

Qibo says “Qibbot was designed for robot fighting games inspired by the sci-fi movie Real Steel.”

They add that players can learn to control Qibbot with just one minute of training.

A showcase video features a ‘big size’ robo-fighter, which is said to weigh 140kg, stands 190cm (6.23 feet) -tall and has a reach of 150cm (4.92 feet) .

Produced in association with SWNS Talker

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