Hanson Robotics

[4] Underneath the Frubber are proprietary motor control systems by which the robots mimic human expressions.

The company's latest creation made her debut at the 2016 South by Southwest (SXSW) show, with her interview by CNBC reaching a broad audience.

[13] She has also been a keynote and panel speaker at global conferences and events,[14][15] including those hosted by ITU,[16] United Nations.

[17] Sophia was featured in AUDI's annual report[18] and has graced the cover and centerfold of ELLE Magazine.

BINA48 (Breakthrough Intelligence via Neural Architecture 48) is a humanoid robot who has a bust-like head and shoulders mounted on a frame, and can produce realistic facial appearance from 30 motors beneath her Frubber skin.

[30] BINA48 is currently stationed at the non-profit Terasem Movement Foundation, Inc. Han debuted in 2015 at the Global Sources electronics fair in Hong Kong.

[34] The robot first became available for purchase to consumers in January 2017 after launching on the crowdfunding platform Kickstarter, and later became available on Amazon and at other popular retailers across the United States.

Professor Einstein is marketed as an educational tool to teach science, primarily to children ages 8–13.

[35] The robot can speak about science, tell jokes, and connect to Wifi to check the weather or access information on the internet.

[38] He was designed as an android portrait of the American science fiction writer Philip K. Dick, and was programmed to contain thousands of pages of the writings of the author, including journals and letters, into a Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) corpus and conversational system construct android.

[41] In 2011, in collaboration with Dutch public broadcaster VPRO, Hanson Robotics developed and introduced a new version of the android.

[47] The robot was created to study human-robot interaction[48] and has camera eyes to track human faces and speech recognition software.

Sophia, the first robot citizen at the AI for Good Global Summit 2018
Albert HUBO, the latest humanoid version of the HUBO robots.
The Hanson Robotics Philip K. Dick Android, in 2019