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Handy robot can crawl and pick up objects from multiple angles

Like something out of the Addams Family, scientists have created a detachable robotic hand that can crawl and grab objects. The design enables tasks such as retrieving objects beyond normal reach and performing multi-object handling, offering potential applications in industrial, service, and exploratory robotics.

The human brain may work more like AI than anyone expected

Scientists have discovered that the human brain understands spoken language in a way that closely resembles how advanced AI language models work. By tracking brain activity as people listened to a long podcast, researchers found that meaning unfolds step by step—much like the layered processing inside systems such as GPT-style models.

A geometric twist boosts the power of robotic textiles

By rethinking how thin metal threads are woven into a flexible textile, EPFL researchers have created a lightweight fabric capable of lifting over 400 times its own weight. The work advances the development of wearables that provide physical assistance without mechanical bulk.

Stefa Mini Solutions for Next-Generation Robotic Applications

The Stefa Mini, Cassette and Nano Seals all have smaller cross sections than comparable seals in the market today. This matters because a smaller seal allows for smaller glands (the area the seal slips into on the equipment) and smaller glands mean overall smaller equipment.

Unbreakable? Researchers warn quantum computers have serious security flaws

Quantum computers could revolutionize everything from drug discovery to business analytics—but their incredible power also makes them surprisingly vulnerable. New research from Penn State warns that today’s quantum machines are not just futuristic tools, but potential gold mines for hackers. The study reveals that weaknesses can exist not only in software, but deep within the physical hardware itself, where valuable algorithms and sensitive data may be exposed.

The Impact Of Virtual Reality On The Real Estate Industry

The Impact Of Virtual Reality On The Real Estate Industry

The state of Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR) technologies in today’s real estate and gaming industry is booming. Besides, the entertainment industry is witnessing tremendous advantages using AR and VR-enabled applications.

E-commerce companies are also widely applying VR and AR-powered apps to offer the best virtual experiences to their customers in real time. IKEA Place mobile app is one of the best examples of AR/VR apps for Android and iOS. It allows users to virtually place products in their spaces and make their purchasing decision smarter.

According to market research reports, the global value of augmented reality and virtual reality is expected to reach approximately $850 billion by the next decade. This huge demand will majorly derive from Real estate, Entertainment, manufacturing, and gaming businesses. A greater number of businesses across these industries are turning to AR and VR technologies to create a realistic virtual environment and deliver best-in-class digital experiences to their customers.

In this article, we would like to guide you on how VR and AR technologies are influencing the global real estate sector and what are the benefits of deploying VR apps for real estate operations. We hope that this information would be helpful for those real estate service providers who are in plans to augment their operations with modern and revolutionary technologies.

Let’s start our session with a brief introduction to VR/AR technology.

What Is Virtual Reality?

Virtual Reality is a computer technology that creates a virtual environment in real time. This intelligent technology helps people to interact with places, games, or other environments in creative three-dimensional virtual visuals.

There are majorly three types of virtual reality categories that help businesses deliver out-of-the-box realistic simulation experiences to their audience and augment brand services. 

The Three Types Of Virtual Reality 

  1. Non-Immersive Virtual Reality is one of the top categories of VR technology that offers a computerized virtual environment and of course, the user will have control and sense their physical environment.
  2. Semi-Immersive Virtual Reality is a category where users feel partial virtual experiences. It means that semi-immersive VR systems or devices will offer realistic virtual experiences using 3D graphical images. It is best for education and training industries to simulate the practices with real-world things.
  3. Fully Immersive Virtual Reality Software is a type that offers 99.9% simulation and has a bright future in the gaming and entertainment industry.

Driven by its intellectual capabilities, the potential of VR technology in the future of manufacturing, real estate, entertainment, and education like the sector is unbelievable. Now, let’s move on to our main session what is the impact of VR on the Real Estate business.

Recommend To Read: The Best 13 AI App Development Companies List

The Power Of VR In Real Estate Business

As novel technologies are being introduced every day and transforming the aspect of industries, the real estate sector is also increasingly adopting VR technology to offer virtual tour services to its customers.

The real estate service providers or brokers are using VR applications and providing realistic virtual viewing of a site, a plot, or a house without visiting the physical location.

Let’s take a look at the top 5 applications of VR in real estate: 

Top Use Cases Of VR In Real Estate

Here are the best use cases of virtual reality in real estate.

  1. VR In Real Estate For Property View

It is one of the best uses of virtual reality in real estate. Customers will make their final decision about buying property after they visit the location. It is a time-taking process, but they will not make their investments on land or property without viewing the location with their eyes.

VR-powered software applications and systems are the best solutions that help customers virtually visit the locations from the convenience of their spaces. It saves the time of both customers and real estate agents.

Interactive virtual tours are the best example of this scenario. VR-powered 3D virtual tours are a trend in the global real estate industry. Customers can view a property in 360-degree view by using VR-enabled headsets.

  1. VR In Real Estate For Virtual Inspection

The use of virtual reality applications or systems is also gaining popularity in real estate for virtually visualizing the final construction of a property. The potential of virtual reality for real estate marketing is incredible.

VR helps real estate companies to show the final structure of semi-constructed properties in attractive 3D visuals. Hence, buyers will view the final appearance of the external and internal design of the architecture. It augments virtual representation of an under-construction project, increase the lead conversions, and also optimize sales.

Recommend To Read: How Much Does It Cost For A Trending IKEA-like AR Shopping App Development?

  1. VR In Real Estate For Virtual Guidance To Renters

Here is another best use case of VR in real estate industry. Intelligent VR-based software tools and ai applications will help rea estate agents to effectively communicate with tenants. It has wide scope in the vacation rental industry.

Real Estate agents can offer VR-enabled 3D virtual home tours and assist tenants in viewing the property and neighbor spaces in high resolution. Hence, VR in real estate will help agents to record VR videos at once and prevent routine tasks like property explanation. Virtual agents can provide virtual instructions and offer personalized viewing experiences.

  1. VR In Real Estate Ensures Better Communication

It is one of the benefits of using virtual reality applications and tools. VR apps aid instant communication between real estate agents and customers. Using virtual reality applications, real estate service providers can record or view the feedback sent by a customer on the go and improve their experiences. It will increase digital online communications and ensure assured sales.

  1. VR IN Real Estate Sector Augments Traffic Of Site Visits

It is one of the top benefits of using VR for real estate agents. Just imagine, is it possible to guide or show your property or place to 100 customers at a time?

It’s an impossible task. But, VR applications can do this with ease. Hundreds of customers can view virtual videos of properties simultaneously. It will save the time, money (traveling expenses), and energy of real estate agents. With the help of interactive VR tools, customers can imagine themselves inside the house. Thanks to such developments in technology.

These are the top 5 applications of virtual reality technology for the real estate sector. If you’re looking to offer a truly virtual experience to your customers, let’s a partner with USM Business Systemsbest mobile app development company. We are one of the leading AR/VR services and solutions providers in the USA, India, and UAE.

Get In Touch!

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94% of CEOS All-In on AI

A new study finds that nearly all CEOs surveyed are working to integrate AI into their businesses in 2026 – even if return-on-investment takes a while.

Even more encouraging for AI advocates: On average, those same CEOs plan to invest more than twice as much in AI during 2026 as they did the previous year.

Firms leading the way in AI are using the tech to up-skill and retrain their workforces, according to writer Cliff Saran.

In other news and analysis on AI writing:

*’ChatGPT Go’ Rolls-Out Worldwide at $8/month: ChatGPT-maker Open AI is out with a stripped-down version of its chatbot – dubbed ChatGPT Go – which offers more than the free version but less than ChatGPT Plus.

Key benefits include 10 times more messages, file uploads and image creation as compared to ChatGPT Free.

Plus, ChatGPT Go also offers enhanced memory and a bigger context window than ChatGPT Free.

*ChatGPT Go and ChatGPT Free: Here Come the Ads: Those bargain versions of ChatGPT will soon see ads popping-up in the message box – part of the trade-off users will make in exchange for the wallet-friendly alternatives.

For the record, ChatGPT’s maker insists that the chatbot’s responses will not be influenced by the ads it’s running.

And thankfully, the higher subscription tiers –- ChatGPT Plus, Pro and Business — will remain devoid of advertising.

*Gemini Gets Even More Personal: Google is encouraging its Gemini users to give the chatbot full access to your Gmail, photos, search history and YouTube data so that you’ll get even more personalized responses from the AI.

The idea: The more access Gemini has to your highly personalized data, the more personalized its responses.

Dubbed ‘Personal Intelligence,’ the new feature is activated on an app-by-app basis – so you can activate the feature in Google Photos, search history and on YouTube, for example, but keep it deactivated in Gmail.

*Anthropic Rolls-Out Claude ‘Cowork:’ ChatGPT chatbot competitor Claude now has a Cowork module designed to serve-up automated help with computer files and basic computing tasks.

The surprise: Cowork is an AI agent that actually works fairly well, according to writer Reece Rogers.

Also of note: While originally only available with a $100 subscription, Cowork is now also offered under Anthropic’s $20/month plan.

*Apple Reaches for Google Gemini for AI Support: Apple has decided to use Gemini to power its Siri voice assistant – as well as in other facets of the Apple ecosystem.

Interestingly, the deal includes Apple’s right to fine-tune its own version of Gemini, as well as to run Gemini on Siri as a white label product – and not a Google-branded offering.

One change you’ll notice with a Gemini-powered Siri: Enhanced AI emotional support for Siri users, according to writer Marcus Mendes.

*Dow Jones Newswires Embraces AI: Dow Jones has become the latest media outlet with plans to integrate AI into virtually every facet of its work-flow.

The wire service is currently working with Symbolic.ai, which makes an AI publishing platform, to AI-automate much of Down Jones’ research, writing, formatting, summaries and fact-checking.

The plan: If the roll-out is a success at Dow Jones Newswire, the AI platform will also be integrated at other media outlets owned by Dow Jones’ parent company, News Corp.

*Business Messaging Service Slack Beefs-Up Its AI: Salesforce has unveiled a muscled-up version of Slackbot — an AI assistant built into the Slack messaging service that now comes with an AI agent capable of search, auto-message writing and simple, multi-step tasks.

Slack competes with other popular business messaging services — including Microsoft Teams and Meta Workplace — and is powered by AI from Anthropic.

*English Please: DocuSign AI Now Translates Complex Contracts Into Everyday Speak: DocuSign now has a new AI feature that will boil-down complex legalese into easy-to-read English summaries mere mortals can understand.

DocuSign decided to offer the service after learning that 75% of consumers are more comfortable signing legal documents that are summarized in plain English.

You can access the AI summary service directly through DocuSign – or directly through DocuSign on ChatGPT.

*AI Big Picture: A Deep-Dive Into Google AI Chief, Dennis Hassabis: Click here for a riveting 52-minute, CNBC video interview of Dennis Hassabis, the mover-and-shaker behind all things AI at Google.

Some interesting take-aways from the Hassabis interview:

–“It’s (AI) a ferocious competitive environment at the moment. I mean many people were telling me — you know, being in tech for 20, 30 years, say – that it’s the most intense environment they’ve ever seen.”

–Regarding Chinese AI: “The question is, can they innovate something new beyond the frontier.”

–“I call myself a cautious optimist. I’m a very big believer in
human ingenuity. I think given enough time and care, we’ll get this right.”

Share a Link:  Please consider sharing a link to https://RobotWritersAI.com from your blog, social media post, publication or emails. More links leading to RobotWritersAI.com helps everyone interested in AI-generated writing.

Joe Dysart is editor of RobotWritersAI.com and a tech journalist with 20+ years experience. His work has appeared in 150+ publications, including The New York Times and the Financial Times of London.

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The post 94% of CEOS All-In on AI appeared first on Robot Writers AI.

Soft robotic hand ‘sees’ around corners to achieve human-like touch

To reliably complete household chores, assemble products and tackle other manual tasks, robots should be able to adapt their manipulation strategies based on the objects they are working with, similarly to how humans leverage information they gain via the sense of touch. While humans attain tactile information via nerves in their skin and muscles, robots rely on sensors, devices that sense their surroundings and pick up specific physical signals.

AI maps the hidden forces shaping cancer survival worldwide

Researchers have turned artificial intelligence into a powerful new lens for understanding why cancer survival rates differ so dramatically around the world. By analyzing cancer data and health system information from 185 countries, the AI model highlights which factors, such as access to radiotherapy, universal health coverage, and economic strength, are most closely linked to better survival in each nation.

The breakthrough that makes robot faces feel less creepy

Humans pay enormous attention to lips during conversation, and robots have struggled badly to keep up. A new robot developed at Columbia Engineering learned realistic lip movements by watching its own reflection and studying human videos online. This allowed it to speak and sing with synchronized facial motion, without being explicitly programmed. Researchers believe this breakthrough could help robots finally cross the uncanny valley.

Robot Talk Episode 140 – Robot balance and agility, with Amir Patel

Claire chatted to Amir Patel from University College London about designing robots with the agility and manoeuvrability of a cheetah.

Amir Patel is an Associate Professor of Robotics & AI in the Department of Computer Science at University College London (UCL). His research uses robotics methods—sensor fusion, computer vision, mechanical modelling, and optimal control—to understand and quantify animal locomotion, especially high-speed predators such as the cheetah, and to translate these insights into bio-inspired machines. Previously, he served on the faculty of Electrical Engineering at the University of Cape Town, where he founded and directed the African Robotics Unit (ARU).

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