Tech
TOSY and Justin Bieber announce mRobo: we go hands-on, dance-off
Beethoven's Fifth. Michelangelo's Pietà. Plato's Republic. Cornerstones of human civilization, to be sure, but they all pale in comparison to what we saw today at CES: TOSY's new mRobo robot, inspired by none other than the Cultural Colossus of our time, Justin Bieber.

>> Justin Bieber to promote Vietnamese toys in US
The Vietnamese manufacturer and pubescent Prince have just taken the wraps off their latest collaboration: a petite, portable speaker-robot that dances -- nay, transcends -- just like his only slightly larger counterpart.
When in speaker mode, the mRomo weighs in at just 3.3 pounds, stands a little under eight inches tall, and boasts 2GB of internal memory. Its integrated speaker pumps out the jams at bass levels 40Hz, but the real magic happens once the music starts playing, automatically prompting the system to transform into an 18-inch tall robot and start dancing.
Unfortunately, the bot is still in prototype mode, but it's expected to retail for about $200 when it launches during the fall of 2012.
Today, though, we were lucky enough to get a sneak peak of the mRobo, courtesy of a mic'd-up Messiah with sweepy bangs and a leather jacket. Upon taking the stage to roars of applause and Jelly Bean sunshowers, Bieber went on to do a brief demo of the bot, displaying its ability to sync its dance moves to whatever tunes blare out of its abdomen speaker -- in this case, Billie Jean.
The mRobo looked admittedly clumsy at times, and was especially awkward when onstage with the teen phenom, but, as TOSY repeatedly reminded us, it's still in prototype phase. (Bieber, for his part, looked completely awestruck throughout much of the experience.) Before descending from his bubblegum pulpit, Bieber reminded his acolytes to "follow your dreams." Ours, at least, have just been realized.
Latest News
- Yahoo! to sell stake in China's Alibaba for $7.1 billion (May 21, 2012)
- Huawei talks up a high-tech future (May 21, 2012)
- War against software piracy turning heads on global stage (May 21, 2012)
- Facebook falls flat in market debut (May 19, 2012)
- Facebook sets richest tech IPO in motion (May 18, 2012)
- LG shows off UI 3.0 for Ice Cream Sandwich devices, says it's 'unobtrusive and simple' (May 17, 2012)
- Intel launches youth-focused iQ webzine, tells its brand story through aggregation (May 17, 2012)
- Samsung ships QF20 camcorder with WiFi, toughened-up W300 pocket cam (May 17, 2012)
- Facebook feeds hungry IPO investors more shares (May 17, 2012)
- Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 review (May 16, 2012)
More News
- Ubuntu TV eyes-on (Jan 11, 2012)
- Vizio ultrawidescreen, Google TV and Cinema 3D HDTV hands-on (Jan 11, 2012)
- Google search gets more personal, raises hackles (Jan 11, 2012)
- Amazon, Rovi, Flixster and Samsung highlight UltraViolet's CES press event (Jan 11, 2012)
- T-Mobile announces the Samsung Galaxy S Blaze 4G, available 'later this year' (Jan 11, 2012)
- Apple’s New CEO Salary: 378 Million Times As Much As Steve Jobs (Jan 11, 2012)
- Intuit GoPayment's got a brand new card reader for its trip to Canada (Jan 10, 2012)
- China's Huawei unveils world's slimmest smartphone (Jan 10, 2012)
- Motorola Droid 4 hands-on (Jan 10, 2012)
- Intel backs ultra-light laptops with new age controls (Jan 10, 2012)
Focus
After more than a year of tedious negotiations, struggling US Internet pioneer Yahoo! has agreed to sell its stake in Alibaba, China's top e-commerce player, for at least $7.1 billion, the companies announced.




