Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. News

Amazon adds a cute humanoid to its robot lineup

Sprout blends AI smarts with a friendly face.

Add as a preferred source on Google
What would you try with Sprout?

Amazon has acquired New York City-based Fauna Robotics just a couple of months after it unveiled Sprout, a cute humanoid robot.

Specific details of the buyout have yet to be shared, but Fauna CEO Rob Cochran said in a LinkedIn post on Tuesday that he was “incredibly excited” about the development.

“When we launched in NYC back in February 2024, we set out with a clear mission: to ‘build capable, safe, and fun robots for everyone,’” Cochran wrote in the post. “Looking back at how far we’ve come in just two years, I am immensely proud of everything our team has accomplished.”

But what does the buyout mean for Sprout, its friendly humanoid robot designed to operate safely in shared human spaces?

Cochran reassured owners that it’s still selling the Sprout Creator Edition robots to new customers and is providing continued support to all of its existing ones.

“Essentially, no change to the work we’re doing together,” the CEO said, adding that the firm will continue to “operate as Fauna Robotics, an Amazon company.”

Amazon has invested billions of dollars in robotics technology over the years — mainly for warehouse automation and logistics — and with Fauna now under its umbrella, it plans to leverage its engineers’ expertise to further improve its technology.

In a widely reported statement, the e-commerce giant said: “Together with Amazon’s robotics expertise and decades of experience earning customer trust in the home through our retail and devices businesses, we’re looking forward to inventing new ways to make our customers’ lives better and easier.”

Fauna Robotics was founded two years ago and launched Sprout, its debut product, in January.

Costing $50,000, the 3.5-foot-tall humanoid robot is targeted for a range of sectors, including retail and hospitality, where it can meet and greet, showcase products, and guide people around. With custom voices, gestures, and movements, Sprout can also function as “a friendly concierge for the home.” In fact, it reminds us a bit of SoftBank’s Pepper robot, which the company discontinued in 2021 after a lukewarm reception.

Sprout, which comes bundled with a developer platform for creating custom applications, is also pitched at researchers keen on advancing AI development in areas of locomotion, manipulation, and interactive behaviors, and can also offer learning opportunities for students interested in technology.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Your next free Google account might only come with 5GB of storage
Google's free storage has been a competitive advantage over Apple's 5GB iCloud limit for years, but that’s changing.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Google has quietly altered one of the most reliable promises in consumer tech: 15GB of free cloud storage. For years, signing up for a Google account meant getting 15GB of free storage, shared across Gmail, Drive, and Photos. However, that’s changed. 

New accounts are now defaulting to 5GB (same as iCloud), with the full 15GB available only if you have entered your phone number during setup. The prompt users are seeing reads: “Your account includes 5GB of storage. Now get even more storage space with your phone number.”

Read more
Sony shows off AI-touched Xperia 1 VIII camera samples. It’s an epic self-own that I can’t digest
Sony built the Xperia 1 series for people who know what a histogram looks like. Xperia Intelligence appears to have been built for everyone else, and the sample images make that tension impossible to ignore.
Sony aggressive AI photography featured.

Sony has a camera legacy that most brands, regardless of whether they make cameras or smartphones, dream of. The company rewrote what full-frame sensors could do with its Alpha series. 

That particular rendering of skin tones, that restraint with saturation, the commitment to accurate white balance; the company’s color science is precisely why cinematographers, videographers, and photographers like me, in the consumer tech space, swear by its color science and camera hardware. 

Read more
Razer’s new Blade 18 gets Arrow Lake refresh and a modest $3,999.99 starting price
For $3,999.99, you get the base model with Nvidia RTX 5070 Ti. A 5090 variant is available, too.
Razer Blade 18.

Razer has officially unveiled the 2026 Blade 18 today, and at the heart of all three configurations is an Intel Arrow Lake processor. 

I’m talking about the Core Ultra 9 290HX Plus, which features 24 cores, up to 5.5GHz clock speed (with boost), 36MB cache, and an onboard NPU that delivers up to 13 TOPS of compute power. 

Read more