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This AI robot garbage picker can sort over 500 types of trash in seconds

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This AI robot garbage picker can sort over 500 types of trash in seconds

Robots are taking over the dirty work of sorting through our trash and turning it into valuable resources. And not just any robots, but smart robots that use artificial intelligence (AI) to identify and separate different types of waste with incredible speed and accuracy.

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Fast Picker 4.0 (ZenRobotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

MORE: NO HUMAN NEEDED HERE – HOW THIS ROBOT BUILDS WALLS ALL BY ITSELF

The next generation of waste-sorting robots

These robots are the brainchild of ZenRobotics, a global leader in smart robotic recycling. The company has recently launched its fourth generation of waste sorting robots, called ZenRobotics 4.0, which have new features and upgraded AI to optimize and improve the efficiency of waste sorting operations. So, what are these improvements, and how do they work? Let’s take a closer look at the two models of ZenRobotics 4.0: the Heavy Picker 4.0 and the Fast Picker 4.0.

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Heavy Picker 4.0 (ZenRobotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

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Heavy Picker 4.0 sorts big loads of garbage

The Heavy Picker 4.0 is a multipurpose waste sorting robot that can handle bulky materials such as wood, metal, plastic and cardboard. It is capable of sorting items weighing up to 88 pounds each, making up to 2,300 picks per hour for each robot on a sorting line. It has a compact individual recognition system (ZenBrain) that enhances precision and increases efficiency by 60%-100% compared to ZenRobotics’ previous system.

Heavy Picker 4.0 (ZenRobotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

The Heavy Picker 4.0 also benefits from upgraded AI technology with an advanced global recognition database that empowers the robots to identify more than 500 waste categories. This significantly reduces setup times as the Heavy Picker 4.0 will come pre-trained to recognize various types of waste. The upgraded AI also improves motion control and gives the Heavy Picker 4.0 the ability to prioritize picking the item that has the most value to the customer.

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MORE: THE NEXT GENERATION OF TESLA’S HUMANOID ROBOT MAKES ITS DEBUT

Fast Picker 4.0 quick trash sorting robot

The Fast Picker 4.0 is a high-speed waste sorting robot that is ideal for lightweight materials such as paper, plastic and aluminum. It has the Heavy Picker beat at a rate of 80 picks per minute or 4,800 picks per hour. This is double the average pick rate of a human sorter, which is 30-40 picks per minute.

However, the Fast Picker 4.0 has a maximum lifting capacity of 2.2 pounds. The upgraded AI on the Fast Picker 4.0 leverages higher rates of purity, accuracy and recovery, and like the Heavy Picker 4.0, it is able to recognize more than 500 waste categories.

Fast Picker 4.0 (ZenRobotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

One of the key differences with the Fast Picker 4.0 is the customization it offers with adjustable widths and frame design for seamless integration into various picking stations. The Fast Picker 4.0 reaches the full width of the whole conveyor belt.

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Fast Picker 4.0 (ZenRobotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

The Fast Picker 4.0 can also be added at the end of a line of Heavy Pickers, incorporating into waste streams such as wood, scrap and rigid plastics, and sorting smaller material pieces once the Heavy Pickers have removed the bulky material. The Fast Picker can also be easily integrated into side streams, reject recovery lines and quality control.

MORE: HOW THIS ROBOT HELPS YOU PROTECT AND CONNECT YOUR HOME

How robots can help you manage waste better

Waste operators know how challenging it is to sort and recover valuable materials from the mixed waste streams. Manual sorting is slow, expensive and risky, and it often results in low-quality recyclables that end up in landfills or incinerators. That’s where waste-sorting robots come in. They can reduce a company’s carbon footprint, save natural resources and create a circular economy where nothing is wasted.

ZenRobotics AI-powered robots can sort waste 24/7, with high speed and accuracy. They can identify and extract different types of materials, such as metals, plastics, wood, paper and more, and even find new value in waste that might be otherwise overlooked. By using ZenRobotics, companies can generate more revenue from waste, cut operational costs and meet the increasing recycling targets and regulations.

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ZenRobotics robot (ZenRobotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

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Kurt’s key takeaways

As you can see, ZenRobotics 4.0 is a game-changer in the field of waste sorting and recycling. With its smart and fast robots, it offers a solution that is not only environmentally friendly but also economically viable and socially responsible.

How do you feel about the role of robots in waste management? Do you think it’s a step in the right direction or taking jobs away from humans who previously did it? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact.

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Birdbuddy’s new smart feeders aim to make spotting birds easier, even for beginners

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Birdbuddy’s new smart feeders aim to make spotting birds easier, even for beginners

Birdbuddy is introducing two new smart bird feeders: the flagship Birdbuddy 2 and the more compact, cheaper Birdbuddy 2 Mini aimed at first-time users and smaller outdoor spaces. Both models are designed to be faster and easier to use than previous generations, with upgraded cameras that can shoot in portrait or landscape and wake instantly when a bird lands so you’re less likely to miss the good stuff.

The Birdbuddy 2 costs $199 and features a redesigned circular camera housing that delivers 2K HDR video, slow-motion recording, and a wider 135-degree field of view. The upgraded built-in mic should also better pick up birdsong, which could make identifying species easier using both sound and sight.

The feeder itself offers a larger seed capacity and an integrated perch extender, along with support for both 2.4GHz and 5GHz Wi-Fi for more stable connectivity. The new model also adds dual integrated solar panels to help keep it powered throughout the day, while adding a night sleep mode to conserve power.

The Birdbuddy 2 Mini is designed to deliver the same core AI bird identification and camera experience, but in a smaller, more accessible package. At 6.95 inches tall with a smaller seed capacity, it’s geared toward first-time smart birders and smaller outdoor spaces like balconies, and it supports an optional solar panel.

Birdbuddy 2’s first batch of preorders has already sold out, with shipments expected in February 2026 and wider availability set for mid-2026. Meanwhile, the Birdbuddy 2 Mini will be available to preorder for $129 in mid-2026, with the company planning on shipping the smart bird feeder in late 2026.

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Robots learn 1,000 tasks in one day from a single demo

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Robots learn 1,000 tasks in one day from a single demo

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Most robot headlines follow a familiar script: a machine masters one narrow trick in a controlled lab, then comes the bold promise that everything is about to change. I usually tune those stories out. We have heard about robots taking over since science fiction began, yet real-life robots still struggle with basic flexibility. This time felt different.

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ELON MUSK TEASES A FUTURE RUN BY ROBOTS

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Researchers highlight the milestone that shows how a robot learned 1,000 real-world tasks in just one day. (Science Robotics)

How robots learned 1,000 physical tasks in one day

A new report published in Science Robotics caught our attention because the results feel genuinely meaningful, impressive and a little unsettling in the best way. The research comes from a team of academic scientists working in robotics and artificial intelligence, and it tackles one of the field’s biggest limitations.

The researchers taught a robot to learn 1,000 different physical tasks in a single day using just one demonstration per task. These were not small variations of the same movement. The tasks included placing, folding, inserting, gripping and manipulating everyday objects in the real world. For robotics, that is a big deal.

Why robots have always been slow learners

Until now, teaching robots physical tasks has been painfully inefficient. Even simple actions often require hundreds or thousands of demonstrations. Engineers must collect massive datasets and fine-tune systems behind the scenes. That is why most factory robots repeat one motion endlessly and fail as soon as conditions change. Humans learn differently. If someone shows you how to do something once or twice, you can usually figure it out. That gap between human learning and robot learning has held robotics back for decades. This research aims to close that gap.

THE NEW ROBOT THAT COULD MAKE CHORES A THING OF THE PAST

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The research team behind the study focuses on teaching robots to learn physical tasks faster and with less data. (Science Robotics)

How the robot learned 1,000 tasks so fast

The breakthrough comes from a smarter way of teaching robots to learn from demonstrations. Instead of memorizing entire movements, the system breaks tasks into simpler phases. One phase focuses on aligning with the object, and the other handles the interaction itself. This method relies on artificial intelligence, specifically an AI technique called imitation learning that allows robots to learn physical tasks from human demonstrations.

The robot then reuses knowledge from previous tasks and applies it to new ones. This retrieval-based approach allows the system to generalize rather than start from scratch each time. Using this method, called Multi-Task Trajectory Transfer, the researchers trained a real robot arm on 1,000 distinct everyday tasks in under 24 hours of human demonstration time.

Importantly, this was not done in a simulation. It happened in the real world, with real objects, real mistakes and real constraints. That detail matters.

Why this research feels different

Many robotics papers look impressive on paper but fall apart outside perfect lab conditions. This one stands out because it tested the system through thousands of real-world rollouts. The robot also showed it could handle new object instances it had never seen before. That ability to generalize is what robots have been missing. It is the difference between a machine that repeats and one that adapts.

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The robot arm practices everyday movements like gripping, folding and placing objects using a single human demonstration. (Science Robotics)

A long-standing robotics problem may finally be cracking

This research addresses one of the biggest bottlenecks in robotics: inefficient learning from demonstrations. By decomposing tasks and reusing knowledge, the system achieved an order of magnitude improvement in data efficiency compared to traditional approaches. That kind of leap rarely happens overnight. It suggests that the robot-filled future we have talked about for years may be nearer than it looked even a few years ago.

What this means for you

Faster learning changes everything. If robots need less data and less programming, they become cheaper and more flexible. That opens the door to robots working outside tightly controlled environments.

In the long run, this could enable home robots to learn new tasks from simple demonstrations instead of specialist code. It also has major implications for healthcare, logistics and manufacturing.

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More broadly, it signals a shift in artificial intelligence. We are moving away from flashy tricks and toward systems that learn in more human-like ways. Not smarter than people. Just closer to how we actually operate day to day.

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Kurt’s key takeaways 

Robots learning 1,000 tasks in a day does not mean your house will have a humanoid helper tomorrow. Still, it represents real progress on a problem that has limited robotics for decades. When machines start learning more like humans, the conversation changes. The question shifts from what robots can repeat to what they can adapt to next. That shift is worth paying attention to.

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If robots can now learn like us, what tasks would you actually trust one to handle in your own life? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com

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Plaud updates the NotePin with a button

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Plaud updates the NotePin with a button

Plaud has updated its compact NotePin AI recorder. The new NotePin S is almost identical to the original, except for one major difference: a button. It’s joined by a new Plaud Desktop app for recording audio in online meetings, which is free to owners of any Plaud Note or NotePin.

The NotePin S has the same FitBit-esque design as the 2024 original and ships with a lanyard, wristband, clip, and magnetic pin, so you can wear it just about any way you please — now all included in the box, whereas before the lanyard and wristband were sold separately.

It’s about the same size as the NotePin, comes in the same colors (black, purple, or silver), offers similar battery life, and still supports Apple Find My. Like the NotePin, it records audio and generates transcriptions and summaries, whether those are meeting notes, action points, or reminders.

But now it has a button. Whereas the first NotePin used haptic controls, relying on a long squeeze to start recording, with a short buzz to let you know it worked, the S switches to something simpler. A long press of the button starts recording, a short tap adds highlight markers. Plaud’s explanation for the change is simple: buttons are less ambiguous, so you’ll always know you’ve successfully pressed it and started recording, whereas original NotePin users complained they sometimes failed to record because they hadn’t squeezed just right.

AI recorders like this live or die by ease of use, so removing a little friction gives Plaud better odds of survival.

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Alongside the NotePin S, Plaud is launching a new Mac and PC application for recording the audio from online meetings. Plaud Desktop runs in the background and activates whenever it detects calls from apps including Zoom, Meet, and Teams, recording both system audio and from your microphone. You can set it to either record meetings automatically or require manual activation, and unlike some alternatives it doesn’t create a bot that joins the call with you.

Recordings and notes are synced with those from Plaud’s line of hardware recorders, with the same models used for transcription and generation, creating a “seamless” library of audio from your meetings, both online and off.

Plaud Desktop is available now and is free to anyone who already owns a Plaud Note or NotePin device. The new NotePin S is also available today, for $179 — $20 more than the original, which Plaud says will now be phased out.

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