A Tokyo-based start-up called H2L has unveiled a “Capsule Interface” that turns the operator’s own body into a remote controller for a full-size humanoid robot. Seated, or even lying down, inside a pod that looks like a high-tech massage chair, the user makes tiny muscle movements. Optical muscle-displacement sensors pick up those subtle twitches and transmit both the motion and the effort behind it straight to the robot. The result is a surprisingly natural, whole-body form of telepresence: lift a box, shake a hand or wipe a table and the robot does so with the same force you apply.
Because the system reads muscle activity rather than relying on external cameras or bulky exoskeletons, it promises smoother control, no line-of-sight problems and very little learning curve. H2L intends to add proprioceptive feedback so the operator can eventually “feel” the weight or resistance the robot encounters, deepening the sense of embodiment.
The company envisions professional uses first, remote inspection, caregiving in hazardous environments, logistics and even agriculture, where workers could operate far from danger or fatigue. For now, the price tag is still in the six-figure range, so the capsule is aimed at researchers and early industrial adopters. If costs fall the way they once did for smartphones, living through a robotic avatar could move from science fiction to everyday life within a few years.
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