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Forget drones, this street-smart robot could be future of local deliveries

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Forget drones, this street-smart robot could be future of local deliveries

In recent years, the e-commerce landscape has transformed dramatically, with delivery drones and robots emerging as pivotal innovations. Vayu Robotics has introduced its first delivery robot, “The One,” which aims to revolutionize how goods are delivered. Let’s explore the features of Vayu’s robot, its implications for the future of delivery services and its broader impact on the e-commerce industry.

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The One delivery robot (Vayu Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Innovative technology behind Vayu Robotics

Vayu Robotics, founded in 2021 by a team of experienced engineers and technologists, is at the forefront of developing cutting-edge robotics technology for real-world scenarios. The company’s mission is to remove hardware and software bottlenecks that have hindered e-commerce growth.

The One stands out due to its unique combination of AI and low-cost sensing technology. Unlike traditional delivery robots that rely heavily on expensive Lidar systems, Vayu’s robot uses a proprietary vision system called Vayu Sense. This innovative system integrates low-cost CMOS image sensors with advanced computational imaging and machine-learning techniques. The result is a cost-effective, high-resolution robotic vision system with depth perception and object detection capabilities that can operate effectively in challenging conditions.

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The One delivery robot (Vayu Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Vayu Drive: AI-powered autonomy

Complementing the Vayu Sense system is the Vayu Drive, a proprietary foundation AI model for robotics autonomy. This model is trained using both simulated and real-world data, eliminating the need for HD maps and localization technology (Lidar).

The Vayu Drive operates similarly to large language models, processing multimodal inputs, including image tokens from cameras, instruction tokens for robot tasks and route tokens for road-level navigation. Its unique “state” feature allows for efficient processing of large context windows, enabling the robot to operate at 10 frames per second.

The One delivery robot (Vayu Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

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Features and capabilities of The One

The One is designed to carry up to 100 pounds of goods and can travel at speeds of up to 20 mph. Its maximum range on a single charge is between 60 and 70 miles, making it suitable for both urban deliveries and in-store operations.

Measuring 3.3 feet in height, 5.9 feet in length and 2.2 feet in width, The One is compact enough to navigate various environments without causing significant obstruction. It can autonomously navigate through crowded areas, load customer orders in supermarkets and deliver packages directly to doorsteps. Upon arrival, it can open its side door and utilize a robotic arm to release the package, streamlining the delivery process.

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The One delivery robot (Vayu Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

REVOLUTIONARY DELIVERY DRONE COULD BE DROPPING A PACKAGE AT YOUR HOME

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The future of delivery robots

As e-commerce continues to grow – projected to account for 23% of American retail purchases by 2027 – the demand for efficient and cost-effective delivery solutions is on the rise. Vayu Robotics has already secured a significant commercial contract to deploy 2,500 of its delivery robots with a major e-commerce player, starting in San Ramon, California. This deployment marks a significant step toward scaling robotic delivery services across the United States and potentially beyond.

The company’s technology is not limited to delivery robots. Vayu is working with a leading global robotics manufacturer to replace Lidar sensors with Vayu sensing technology in other robotic applications. Furthermore, the company’s software is designed to be robot form factor agnostic, with plans to expand into quadrupedal and bipedal robot markets in the future.

The One delivery robot (Vayu Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Industry recognition and funding

Vayu Robotics has garnered significant attention from investors and industry experts. The company emerged from stealth in October 2023 with $12.7 million in seed funding from backers, including Lockheed Martin. Kanu Gulati, partner at Khosla Ventures, expressed confidence in Vayu’s potential, stating that their novel sensing and AI foundation models address a robotic challenge with immense economic and societal impact.

As Vayu’s co-founder Anand Gopalan noted, “Autonomous delivery robots are only the tip of the iceberg,” hinting at the broader potential of their scalable robotics architecture to empower businesses across industries.

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The One delivery robot (Vayu Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Kurt’s key takeaways

Vayu Robotics has really shaken things up with its new delivery bot, The One. It’s not just another robot on wheels, it’s a game-changer. Think about it: This little guy can navigate city streets, load up orders in stores and even deliver packages right to your doorstep. Sure, it might take some getting used to seeing robots rolling down our streets. But if it means more efficient deliveries and maybe even lower prices on the things we buy online, I think a lot of people will be on board.

Are you ready to have a robot deliver your next pizza or grocery order? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact.

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Apple starts testing end-to-end encrypted RCS messages on iPhone

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Apple starts testing end-to-end encrypted RCS messages on iPhone

Apple is starting to test end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) RCS messages with the developer beta of iOS 26.4 released Monday. Apple announced plans last year to support the feature, and once fully available, it will let iPhone and Android users send encrypted RCS messages to each other across platforms.

However, with this initial implementation, Apple is only testing RCS encryption between Apple devices. It’s “not yet testable with other platforms,” Apple says. The company also doesn’t plan to ship E2EE RCS messages with iOS 26.4; the feature will actually ship publicly in a “future update,” Apple says.

RCS messages significantly improve the experience of texting between iPhone and Android devices, but cross-platform encryption has been a big thing missing. The GSM Association, which helps develop RCS, announced in September 2024 that it was working on E2EE messages as part of the “next major milestone” for the RCS Universal Profile, and Apple said in March 2025 that it would support E2EE RCS messages on iOS, iPadOS, macOS, and watchOS in “future software updates.”

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Wearable robotics are changing how we walk and run

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Wearable robotics are changing how we walk and run

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When you hear the word robotics, you probably think of factory machines or humanoid robots sprinting across a test track. That image makes sense. For years, robotics lived in labs and industrial spaces. 

But a quieter shift is happening much closer to home. It is happening around your ankles, knees and hips. Wearable robotics are moving out of research labs and into everyday life. From powered shoes to lightweight exoskeletons, this new wave of assisted movement technology is becoming a real consumer category. 

The goal is not to replace your effort. It is to support it. And that shift is bigger than any single brand.

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Wearable robotics are moving from labs to everyday life, with powered shoes and exoskeletons designed to reduce fatigue and support natural movement. (Xiao Xiao/Xinhua via Getty Images)

From elite athletes to everyday use: the shift in wearable robotics

For years, sports innovation focused on speed. Lighter foam. Carbon plates. Better traction. Most of those gains targeted elite competitors. Now the focus is expanding beyond race day. Nike’s Project Amplify, developed with robotics partner Dephy, is one example. The system pairs a carbon plate inside the shoe with a motorized cuff worn above the ankle. Sensors track stride patterns in real time, and the cuff provides subtle forward assistance designed to feel smooth and natural. Instead of forcing movement, it learns it.

Earlier attempts at powered footwear struggled because batteries and motors were too heavy to sit inside a shoe. The result felt awkward and unbalanced. Modern designs solve that problem by moving energy storage above the ankle or to the hips. By shifting weight higher on the leg, engineers reduce strain on the foot and improve balance.

Battery improvements and smarter motion sensors also play a role. Today’s systems adapt to your stride in real time, making assisted movement feel less like equipment and more like an extension of your body. The company has said it is targeting a commercial release around 2028.  But Nike is not alone in this space.

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Powered footwear and exoskeletons are entering the consumer market

If you have ever felt your legs get heavy halfway through a long walk, you understand why this category exists. Maybe it is a trip through the airport, a walk around the neighborhood or a few flights of stairs that feel steeper than they used to. Most people are not trying to run faster. They just want to move without feeling worn out. That is where wearable robotics are starting to show up. Companies are building products meant for real people, not just elite athletes or lab testing.

Early consumer exoskeletons for outdoor movement

The Hypershell X is one example. It is a lightweight outdoor exoskeleton designed for hikers and long-distance walkers. The system wraps around the waist and legs and uses small motors to reduce fatigue on climbs and uneven terrain. The goal is straightforward. Help you go farther without feeling drained halfway through the trail. Hypershell also introduced the X Ultra, a more powerful version built for steeper terrain and longer outings. It delivers stronger assist levels while staying compact enough to wear under standard outdoor gear. Both models are designed for recreational users who want endurance support, not medical treatment.

Dnsys has also introduced the X1 all-terrain exoskeleton. The hip-mounted system is marketed to hikers and outdoor enthusiasts who want help reducing fatigue on climbs and long treks. Unlike lab prototypes, the X1 has been sold through crowdfunding and direct online orders, making it one of the early consumer entries in this space.

Wearable robotics designed for everyday walking

Another example is WIM from WIRobotics. This wearable robot weighs about 3.5 pounds and supports natural hip movement while walking. It is meant for older adults, active adults and people recovering from minor injuries who want extra assistance without wearing something bulky or clinical looking.

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Medical exoskeleton makers such as Ekso Bionics and ReWalk paved the way for today’s consumer wearable robotics. (Wu Junyi/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images)

From medical exoskeletons to consumer devices

The medical side of wearable robotics has been evolving even longer. Companies like Ekso Bionics and ReWalk have developed powered exoskeletons that help people with spinal cord injuries or stroke stand and walk. These systems are used in rehabilitation clinics and in select personal mobility programs. They show how wearable robotics first proved themselves in medical settings before gradually influencing consumer designs.

These products vary in power, price and purpose. What connects them is a shared direction. Wearable robotics are beginning to actively assist movement, not just track it.

How wearable robotics help reduce fatigue and movement hesitation

Here is something people rarely admit. It is not always an injury that stops movement. It is hesitation. Many people worry about knee pain creeping in halfway through a walk. Others fear running out of energy before they make it home. Some quietly stress about slowing everyone else down.

Those doubts shorten walks and cancel runs long before physical limits do. Wearable robotics hopes to close that confidence gap. By reducing fatigue and supporting joints, assisted movement systems can make activity feel realistic again for people who might otherwise skip it. Effort does not disappear. The barrier to starting simply becomes lower.

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Powered footwear and wearable robotics support natural movement

A better comparison might be e-bikes. Electric assistance did not eliminate cycling. Instead, it expanded who felt comfortable getting on a bike in the first place. Powered footwear and wearable robotics could have a similar effect on walking and running. In practical terms, that might look different for different people.

Some commuters could replace short car trips. Older adults might stay active longer without feeling as worn out. Casual runners could finish a workout with energy to spare instead of dragging through the final mile. In other words, this shift is not about creating super athletes. It is about widening the circle of people who feel capable of participating.

What this means to you

You may never strap on a powered exoskeleton. You may not be waiting for motorized shoes to hit stores in 2028. But this shift still matters. If walking a long trail leaves your knees aching, or if you skip runs because you worry about burning out halfway through, this kind of technology is being built with you in mind. The goal is not to turn anyone into a super athlete. It is to make movement feel more doable.

For some people, that could mean walking an extra mile without thinking twice. For others, it might mean keeping up with friends, staying active longer or feeling a little less hesitant about getting started. Wearable robotics are changing the conversation. Instead of asking how fast you can go, the question becomes simpler. How comfortable do you want to feel while moving? And that is a very different way to think about fitness.

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Consumer exoskeletons like Hypershell X and Dnsys X1 target hikers seeking endurance support on long treks. (Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Kurt’s key takeaways

Wearable robotics systems are still in the early stages of consumer adoption. Most powered footwear and exoskeleton systems remain expensive and limited in availability. But the direction is clear. Technology is shifting from tracking your performance to actively supporting it. That is a meaningful change. If assisted movement becomes as common as smartwatches or fitness trackers, it could reshape how people think about aging, endurance and daily mobility. Walking farther may feel realistic again. Running may feel less intimidating. Staying active later in life could become more achievable for millions. The real question is not whether wearable robotics will improve. They will. The bigger question is how we choose to use them.

If wearable robotics can help you walk and run with less strain, would you try them, or would you rather rely only on your own effort? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.

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Samsung ad confirms rumors of a useful S26 ‘privacy display’

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Samsung ad confirms rumors of a useful S26 ‘privacy display’

Samsung has released a new advertisement for its upcoming Galaxy S26 launch that all-but confirms rumors of a new display with a built-in privacy mode. Leaked videos show that the feature could be capable of entirely blacking out content from specific apps or parts of the display when viewed at an angle.

The new advert shows a woman reading a racy romance novel on a subway, while curious passengers look over her shoulder. An overlay shows a quick flick of a “Zero-peeking privacy” toggle, which blacks out the titillating content for the nosy onlookers.

That might sound similar to existing privacy filters, which have been available as after-market screen protectors for years, or found built into products including certain HP laptops. But leaks say what Samsung has in store for the S26 range is different.

It will reportedly use a new type of OLED panel that Samsung Display first debuted two years ago at MWC 2024 called Flex Magic Pixel. It allows viewing angles to be adjusted on a pixel-by-pixel basis, so the privacy effect is only applied to certain parts of the screen at a time. Combined with some AI, that means it could automatically protect sensitive information in a banking app, or be used to hide notifications in a messaging app, as shown in this short video clip shared by the reliable leaker Ice Universe.

We’ll find out more soon enough — Samsung has confirmed that its Unpacked launch event will take place later this month, on February 25th.

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