The World Cup has seen superstars, pitch invaders, heartbreak and joy across its 96 years — and, on Sunday, ​it got a robot.Atlas, an advanced humanoid robot, stepped pitchside to ​deliver the match ball to the referee at halftime at ⁠New York New Jersey Stadium, where Brazilwer…

The World Cup has seen superstars, pitch invaders, heartbreak and joy across its 96 years — and, on Sunday, ​it got a robot.Atlas, an advanced humanoid robot, stepped pitchside to ​deliver the match ball to the referee at halftime at ⁠New York New Jersey Stadium, where Brazilwere playingNorway in the round of ​16. Its moves include imitating a few uncanny goal celebrations — including Norwegian striker ​Erling Haaland's meditation pose."We always looked at human skill as a way to like motivate us and challenge us to push forward what robots can do," said Alberto ​Rodriguez, director of robot behavior at Boston Dynamics.The robot, presented by ​tournament sponsor Hyundai Motor, has previously danced and engaged in parkour.But to deliver the match ‌ball — ⁠and pull off a few sweet moves — Atlas had to navigate challenges unique to the World Cup.Standard Wi-Fi communications with Atlas were out of the question, with tens of thousands of fans surrounding the pitch with cellphones, so ​a new communications ​channel was established ⁠with a radio device attached to the robot's back."And grass has its own peculiarity," said Rodriguez. "We had to ​change the way that Atlas learns to walk and ​learns to ⁠jump and run so that it's more robust."Hyundai has been aggressively pursuing mass production of the robots, announcing this year that it plans to deploy them ⁠at its ​U.S. manufacturing plant in Georgia starting in ​2028, in an effort to automate high-risk and repetitive tasks.Source: Reuters-Agencies