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MagicLab's Xiaomai: Watch how Humanoid Robot Demonstrates Hair Styling, Hotel Services, and Car Parking

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MagicLab Xiaomai

Watch MagicLab's Xiaomai in action

Chinese robotics company MagicLab has unveiled its latest humanoid robot, Xiaomai, showcasing its capabilities in hair styling, hotel services, and car parking in a recently released video. This demonstration highlights Xiaomai's potential to perform complex tasks across various service industries.

In the video, Xiaomai is seen assisting in a hair salon, adeptly handling tools and interacting with clients, suggesting a future where robots could play a significant role in personal grooming services. The robot also performs hotel-related tasks, such as delivering items to guests and providing concierge services, indicating its potential to enhance hospitality operations. Additionally, Xiaomai demonstrates its ability to remember where cars are parked, showcasing advanced navigation and spatial awareness skills.

MagicLab's previous developments include MagicBot, a humanoid robot capable of toasting marshmallows, folding clothes, and dancing. These demonstrations underscore the company's focus on creating robots with dexterous hands and versatile functionalities. The integration of miniature high-torque servo actuators and sensitive multi-dimensional pressure sensors has been pivotal in achieving such dexterity. (interestingengineering.com)

While Xiaomai’s performance is polished, translating such demos into reliable, real-world deployments is still no small feat. Questions around cost-effectiveness, uptime, and how people respond to robot staff remain very much in play. Interestingly, recent research suggests that a robot’s embodiment and perceived human-likeness can significantly shape consumer reactions — something Xiaomai seems deliberately designed to explore. (researchgate.net)

Rather than just another humanoid prototype, Xiaomai feels like part of a broader experiment in testing what kinds of robot interactions actually work in public-facing roles. MagicLab’s work here isn’t just about technical achievement — it’s also a testbed for human-robot dynamics, and that’s where things get really interesting.