A humanoid robot smashed expectations at the Beijing half-marathon today, completing the course in 50 minutes and 26 seconds—a time that eclipses the current human world record of 57 minutes held by Jacob Kiplimo.
A New Benchmark for Robotics
While comparing biological endurance to mechanical engineering remains a point of contention—with one social media user observing that “my car can outrun a cheetah too”—the performance gap is closing rapidly. This year’s winning time represents a staggering leap in efficiency compared to last year’s event, where the fastest robot required two hours and 40 minutes to finish the same distance.
The Honor Robot Victory
According to The Associated Press, the winning entry was developed by Chinese smartphone manufacturer Honor. Interestingly, the official winner was determined by a weighted scoring system rather than pure speed. While another Honor unit actually clocked a faster time of 48 minutes and 19 seconds, it was disqualified from the top spot because it was remote-controlled, whereas the 50:26 finisher operated autonomously.
Technical Challenges on the Track
Data provided by Beijing’s E-Town tech hub reveals that the field was split, with 40% of the robots operating autonomously and 60% relying on remote guidance. Despite the impressive winning times, the event highlighted the ongoing volatility in robotics; the race was not without setbacks, as several participants struggled with navigation, including one unit that collapsed at the starting line and another that collided with a track barrier.
