@aniksingal: I tried to beat a robot at badminton. By the tenth shot, I knew I was in trouble. Meet ANYmal — a four-legged robot built by researchers at ETH Zurich. It tracks a shuttlecock using onboard cameras, predicts where it's going, and reacts in milliseconds to return the shot. But here's the twist. ANYmal wasn't built for sports. It's a 50+ kg industrial inspection robot designed to enter places too dangerous for humans — chemical plants, disaster zones, collapsed structures filled with toxic gas. Badminton was just the test. And it's a brutal one. A shuttlecock travels at over 300 km/h — too fast to simply track with a camera. So ANYmal constantly repositions its entire body to keep the shuttle in view while predicting its landing point. Before ever stepping on a real court, it trained through thousands of virtual matches first. The real goal was never sport. ETH Zurich used badminton to answer a harder question — can a robot react to fast, unpredictable situations in real time? Because that's exactly what it needs to do when entering a collapsing building or responding to an emergency where every second matters. Would you want a robot like this showing up to help in an emergency — or does it scare you a little? Tell me below. Save this — robotics is moving faster than most people realize. #AINews #anik #aiupdates #FutureTech #AIRobotics #dailyai #aitech #ai2026 #aiupdates #ainews