Editorial | First humanoid robot games are proof the future is already here
From automation to athletics, the merging of artificial intelligence with robotics holds great promise, and peril

Anyone who watched the robots at the event would realise that, soon, they will be faster, stronger and more agile than any human. Physical labour, at least for those who can afford it, may soon be a thing of the past. That may also be disconcerting.
Already, in China, Japan and South Korea, some hotels, restaurants and elderly care homes are using robots. The United States is developing robotic soldiers.
Those at the Beijing games were “dumb” robots, programmed to perform only a few tasks. But China is going full steam ahead with artificial intelligence (AI). Robots are being merged with AI.
Since the time of Henry Ford and his pioneering assembly-line method of car manufacturing, the complaint has been that human workers are forced to perform robotic tasks.
