- Sony's terrifyingly fast robot arm is finally beating pro-level table tennis players at their own game PC Gamer —
- Ping-pong robot Ace makes history by beating top-level human players The Japan Times —
- Watch Sonyโs elite ping-pong robot beat top-ranked players The Verge —
- A robot is beating human pros at table tennis. Its maker calls it a milestone for machines ABC News —
- Ping Pong Robot Uses Agentic AI Bloomberg —
- Robot beats elite human players at table tennis Semafor —
- A robot that uses AI is beating humans at table tennis Boston Globe —
- A paddle-wielding robot is beating human pros at table tennis ๐น AP News —
- Ping-pong robot Ace makes history by beating top-level human players - Reuters Reuters —
- AI bats away ping-pong challenge as rise of the machines continues The Register —
- A robot is beating human pros at table tennis. Its maker calls it a milestone for machines The Globe and Mail —
- Sony's New AI Robot Can Probably Beat You in Table Tennis CNET —
- A robot is beating human pros at table tennis. Its maker calls it a milestone for machines CTV News —
- Robot vs. human. Watch robot beat elite players in ping pong USA Today —
- Sony AI's robot Ace scores against pro ping-pong players ๐น Reuters —
- Meet โAce,โ the paddle-wielding robot who just beat humans at ping pong in AI breakthrough Fortune —
- Table tennis-playing robot on track to becoming world champion New Scientist —
- The robot that can outplay elite table tennis players Sky News —
- A robot is beating human pros at table tennis. Its maker calls it a milestone for machines ABC News —
- AI robot scores against pro ping-pong players ๐น Reuters —
AIBO
Robotic dog made by Sony
AIBO is a series of robotic dogs designed and manufactured by Sony. Sony announced a prototype Aibo in mid-1998, and the first consumer model was introduced on 11 May 1999. New models were released every year until 2006. Although most models were inspired by dogs, other inspirations included lion cubs and space explorers. Only the ERS-7, ERS-110/111 and ERS-1000 versions were explicitly a "robotic dog", but the 210 can also be considered a dog due to its Jack Russell Terrier appearance and face. In 2006, AIBO was added into the Carnegie Mellon University Robot Hall of Fame.