Technology
Humanoid robots hit mass production in China
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For years, humanoid robots felt like something you watched on social media. Impressive, yes. Practical, not quite. That line just got blurry.
A new factory in China is now producing humanoid robots at a pace that feels closer to car manufacturing. One robot rolls off the line every 30 minutes.
That adds up to about 10,000 units a year. This is not a prototype phase anymore. This is real production.
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A Chinese factory is producing humanoid robots every 30 minutes, signaling a shift from experimental tech to mass production. (Tang Yanjun/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images)
Inside China’s humanoid robot factory
The production line comes from a partnership between Leju Robotics and Dongfang Precision Science & Technology. What makes this facility stand out is how structured and repeatable the process has become.
There are 24 precision assembly stages. On top of that, 77 inspection steps check everything before a robot leaves the line. That level of testing matters because reliability has always been a weak spot for humanoid machines. Efficiency also jumped. The company says output improved by more than 50 percent compared to older production methods.
Then there is flexibility. The system can switch between robot models without shutting everything down. That means the same factory can serve multiple industries, from automotive to home appliances. This is how you move from cool tech to actual business.
Why humanoid robot production at 10,000 units matters
The robotics industry has reached a turning point. It is no longer enough to show what a robot can do. Companies now need to prove they can build them at scale.
That shift is showing up across the market.
- Agibot has already hit 10,000 units
- Unitree Robotics is planning a major expansion with new funding
- UBTECH Robotics is working to lower costs to below $20,000 per robot
Investors are watching production numbers closely. High output signals that a company can move beyond demos and into real deployment. It also shows confidence that there will be actual demand.
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High-volume humanoid robot production marks a turning point for the global robotics industry. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
The shift to large-scale humanoid robot manufacturing
There is another important change here that is easy to miss. Companies are splitting roles. In this case, Leju Robotics focuses on design and software. Dongfang Precision Science & Technology handles production and scaling. This model looks a lot like how other tech industries evolved. One group builds the brain. Another builds the product at scale. That separation could speed things up across the entire robotics space.
What is still holding humanoid robots back
Even with all this progress, one big problem remains. Software. Building the body is getting easier. Teaching it how to function in the real world is still difficult. Homes, warehouses and public spaces are unpredictable. Objects vary in shape. Lighting changes. Tasks that seem simple for humans can confuse a machine. Factories can now produce thousands of robots. That does not guarantee those robots will be useful right away. The pressure is shifting toward AI developers to close that gap.
What this means to you
This might feel far removed from everyday life. It is not. As production ramps up, costs usually come down. That opens the door for more businesses to adopt humanoid robots. You could start seeing them in warehouses, retail environments or service roles sooner than expected. At the same time, this raises questions about jobs, safety and how comfortable people feel interacting with machines that look and move like humans. The speed of this shift is what stands out. What felt experimental last year is now moving toward mainstream deployment.
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ARE ROBOTS COMING TO A MCDONALD’S NEAR YOU?
China ramps up humanoid robot manufacturing with a facility capable of producing 10,000 units annually. (Tang Yanjun/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images)
Kurt’s key takeaways
Humanoid robots are entering a new phase. The conversation is no longer about whether they can be built. It is about how quickly they can be produced and where they will actually work. Factories like this one in China are setting the pace. Now the rest of the industry has to keep up.
If humanoid robots become common in workplaces, where would you draw the line between helpful automation and going too far? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Technology
Welcome to Night Vale host Cecil Baldwin shares his tech pet peeves
Cecil Baldwin’s résumé includes appearances on Gravity Falls, narrating the documentary Scream, Queen! My Nightmare on Elm Street, and performing as part of the New York Neo-Futurists theater company. But he is best known as the host of the podcast Welcome to Night Vale, a long-running fiction show that blends macabre Lovecraftian horror with absurdist comedy. As Cecil Palmer, the voice of Night Vale Community Radio, Baldwin keeps the people of the titular town abreast of all the goings ons with the Faceless Old Woman Who Secretly Lives in Your Home and offers tips on how to best maintain their Bloodstone circles.
He also cohosts Random Number Generator Horror Podcast No. 9 with Night Vale cocreator Jeffrey Cranor, recently directed the play As Sylvia and raises awareness for LGBTQ+ issues and HIV. In short — he’s a busy man. So we’re excited that he found some time to tell us about his tech pet peeves.
What is one thing you wish you could change about your phone?
I wish it were impossible to manually text and drive a vehicle at the same time. We are collectively way worse at it than we think.
What is your happy place online?
Adding books to my Favorite list on Amazon so I remember titles/authors, and then taking that list to my local new and/or used bookstore and buying them there.
Which tech trend do you wish would go away?
Please, I’m begging you, let me watch the credits of the film or television show in peace. I just finished a movie, you don’t need to roll me right into a whole new one. Let me digest for just a second.
What creation are you most proud of?
It would have to be the podcast Welcome to Night Vale, right? It was the acting role that changed the trajectory of my life.
What do you do when you’re feeling stuck?
I will literally say to myself “1, 2, 3, 4, 5…. Walk away.” It’s like an unbinding, spoken out loud when I don’t know how to move forward with a project or I’m stuck in a social media scroll-frenzy that is giving no pleasure. Put it down. Walk away. Focus on something else for a while.
What’s the last piece of physical media you bought?
Picked up a few albums at my local record store: Marianne Faithfull À la Télévision 1965-1967, Jorge Ben Jor Jorge Ben, and Dr John Gris-Gris.
What would the tagline for your biopic be?
Performing authenticity… for real.
What’s the last GIF or meme you used?
Technology
Will this high-tech lounge change how you wait at airports?
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You know that feeling. You cleared security, your flight isn’t boarding yet and now you are wandering the airport terminal. You are looking for a seat, an outlet or something to eat that does not feel ridiculously overpriced.
At Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, a new lounge wants to make that dead time feel a lot less dead. Portal Lounge, a new high-tech airport lounge from the founders of Gameway, opened May 28 at MSP.
It blends gaming, dining, music, interactive design and robot-made drinks into a social space built for travelers who want a better way to spend their time before boarding.
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Portal Lounge’s glowing entrance gives travelers at MSP a first look at its high-tech airport lounge concept. (Portal Lounge)
Portal Lounge brings high-tech travel to MSP
Portal Lounge comes from Jordan and Emma Walbridge, the entrepreneurs behind Gameway. Their airport gaming concept already operates across nine U.S. airports, with plans to reach 11 locations by the end of the year.
Portal Lounge takes that gaming idea and expands it into a broader hospitality experience. Instead of building another traditional lounge around silence and exclusivity, the founders designed a social space with energy, entertainment and technology at the center.
The lounge spans 3,800 square feet and can hold about 114 people. It features a portal-inspired entrance, cinematic lighting, art deco-inspired interiors, curated music, custom furnishings and social seating areas.
Gaming stations turn airport waiting into playtime
One of the biggest tech features is the gaming setup. Portal Lounge includes 17 dedicated gaming stations with Nintendo Switch, Xbox, PlayStation and custom-built gaming PCs.
Travelers can choose from nearly 30 titles across casual, multiplayer, streaming and competitive gameplay. Adults ages 30 to 39 now represent the largest gaming demographic in the U.S. That same group also includes many travelers willing to spend on better airport experiences.
Emma said Gameway helped show how travelers respond when airport downtime becomes more interactive.
“Gameway really showed us how much travelers respond to environments that feel interactive and intentional,” Emma told CyberGuy. “When people are traveling, especially during delays or long layovers, they’re looking for ways to decompress and reset instead of just sitting in another generic waiting area.”
That insight helped shape Portal Lounge beyond gaming alone. Emma said the team wanted the space to feel welcoming, energetic and experience-driven while still offering the comfort travelers expect from a premium lounge.
“The gaming and entertainment elements are part of that, but so is the atmosphere, the food and beverage program, the music, and the overall design of the space,” she said.
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Gaming stations inside Portal Lounge let travelers play Nintendo Switch, Xbox, PlayStation and PC games before boarding. (Portal Lounge)
A robot bartender adds airport theater
The robotic bartender will probably get the most attention, and for good reason. Portal Lounge says it is introducing the first robotic bartender of its kind inside a U.S. airport lounge. The robot was developed in Italy and works alongside a traditional bar program. It can prepare cocktails and mocktails while giving travelers something highly visual to watch. That makes it part drink service and part entertainment.
This is where the lounge leans fully into tech-enabled hospitality. The robot does not replace the entire bar experience. Instead, it adds a memorable centerpiece that people will likely record, share and talk about before boarding. In other words, the robot bartender is the hook. The bigger story is how airports are starting to turn waiting into an interactive experience.
How Portal Lounge uses tech beyond the wow factor
“For us, the technology is there to enhance the experience, not overpower it,” Jordan told CyberGuy. “We wanted Portal Lounge to feel modern, social, and experiential in a way that traditional airport lounges really haven’t evolved into yet.”
He said technology touches the full lounge experience, from check-in to entertainment, lighting, music and gaming. “The goal was to create something that feels seamless and immersive from the moment you walk in,” he said.
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Portal Lounge’s robotic bartender works alongside a traditional bar program to prepare cocktails and mocktails for travelers. (Portal Lounge)
Portal Lounge adds food, music and local flavor
Portal Lounge is also trying to move beyond the usual airport food experience. The menu includes chef-driven small plates, regional drinks and cocktails tied to Minnesota. One signature drink, called the “Lag Free,” is a Minnesota-inspired margarita with Honeycrisp apple, maple and citrus notes.
There is also “Prince’s Lemonade,” a zero-proof cocktail inspired by Minnesota music icon Prince. That local touch helps the lounge feel connected to Minneapolis instead of like another airport space that could be anywhere. It also speaks to a bigger travel shift. Many travelers want places that feel memorable, photo-worthy and tied to the city they are passing through.
Why airport lounges are changing
Airport lounges used to be pretty predictable. You got a quieter seat, a snack, Wi-Fi and maybe a drink before your flight. For years, that felt like enough. Now, many travelers want more from the time they spend inside airports. Some lounges are packed. Gate areas can feel chaotic. And when you have an hour or two before boarding, sitting around and staring at a screen gets old fast.
That is where Portal Lounge is trying something different. It operates as an independent common-use lounge instead of an airline-specific club. Travelers can access it through Priority Pass and participating credit card programs, including Chase, American Express and Capital One. Walk-in access is also expected to cost about $70, depending on availability.
That price may make some people pause. For a quick stop before boarding, it may not make sense. But for a long delay, an extended layover or a family with time to burn, the math changes. Portal Lounge is betting that games, food, music and robot-made drinks can make airport waiting feel a lot less like waiting.
Inside Portal Lounge, travelers can relax in a tech-forward social space with seating, lighting, food, drinks and music. (Portal Lounge)
Why MSP makes sense for Portal Lounge
Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport gives Portal Lounge a strong place to launch this concept. MSP welcomed about 36 million passengers in 2025, and many of them begin their trips there. That means plenty of travelers arrive early, clear security and still have time before boarding.
That extra time is exactly what Portal Lounge is built around. If you are running to your gate, you are probably not stopping for a gaming session or a robot-made mocktail. But if you have 90 minutes to spare, the pitch changes fast. Suddenly, the airport wait does not have to mean sitting shoulder to shoulder at the gate, guarding your bag and watching the minutes crawl by. Portal Lounge is hoping that travelers with time to kill may want something better to do with it.
What this means for you
Portal Lounge could give airport downtime a much-needed upgrade. If you are flying through MSP, it may offer a more entertaining way to wait. You can play games, grab food, listen to curated music and check out a robotic bartender before your flight.
Emma said the goal is for travelers to feel like the lounge changes the way they experience airport time.”We hope travelers walk away feeling like their time at the airport became part of the trip itself, not just time spent waiting for a flight,” she said. “Portal Lounge was designed to create a more immersive, engaging, and entertainment-driven experience, where guests can genuinely relax, connect, and enjoy themselves in a way that feels very different from a traditional airport lounge.”
That sounds appealing, especially if you are facing a delay or traveling with people who get restless before boarding. Still, the coolest lounge in the airport does not help if you miss your flight. Set an alarm, watch the boarding time and do not let one more game turn into a sprint to the gate.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
Portal Lounge feels like a sign of where airport travel is headed. Travelers no longer want to sit around and stare at a boarding screen for two hours. They want comfort, entertainment and a better use of their time. The robotic bartender will grab attention. But the bigger tech story is the full experience: gaming stations, interactive design, curated music, social seating and a lounge model built around how people actually spend downtime today. Will every traveler want this? Probably not. Some people still want a quiet corner and a strong cup of coffee. But for travelers who see airport time as dead time, Portal Lounge could make the wait feel more useful and a lot more fun.
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Would you pay for a high-tech airport lounge with gaming stations and robot-made drinks, or would you rather save the money and wait at the gate? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.
Technology
Backrooms is a certified blockbuster with a $38 million opening day
The Kane Parsons’ film Backrooms is expected to earn up to $90 million in its opening weekend after pulling down $38 million on Friday alone. That’s not only above expectations, but absolutely obliterates A24’s previous opening weekend record of $25.5 million for Alex Garland’s Civil War. It’s also a better opening day than The Mandalorian and Grogu, which only pulled down $33.7 million on its way to a total $81.6 million for the weekend.
That also means that Backrooms is an incredibly profitable movie, with an estimated $10 million budget. By comparison, the latest Star Wars disappointment cost $165 million and was considered affordable compared to other entries in the series.
While Backrooms hasn’t received quite as much universal praise as fellow low-budget horror breakout Obsession, it’s still largely getting positive reviews. It also adds to the growing number of YouTube creators (including Obsession’s Curry Barker) who have proven to be successful box office draws.
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