Almost anything. One definition of robot is "artificial agent" (a better definition is in the link below). Artificial just means someone made it, agent means it does something for someone (my favorite robot is the dishwasher - someone built it to wash dishes for me). Many people assume "agency" includes the ability to act by itself (autonomy), or at least look like it can. These days most of the really popular robots are exploring places people can't go yet (Voyager left the solar system not too long ago, Spirit and Opportunity are still running around Mars) and doing things too dangerous for humans to do safely (like hunting for roadside bombs in war zones or searching the bottom of the ocean). I used to work with a parts placer in an electronics assembly plant, it took very small parts from reels and bins and placed them on circuit boards. Some car manufacturers use big industrial robots for welding and lifting cars and trucks. Nanotechnology is finally catching on, with motors and wheels the size of atoms. I have seen pictures of remote control robots for doing surgery from somewhere outside the hospital, like from Another Country. Then there are the vacuuming robots. Anything you can build to do something for you is basically a robot. Oh yeah, don't forget battlebots! Some of us like the sound of smashing and tearing metal.
how does the wakamura robot work
It depends on what kind of robot you are talking about.
A work envelope is a robot's range of movement.
The word robot is from Czech. In Czech robot means "work".
He is a core.
What kind of a question is that?!?
Humans, by definition, do everything that makes a robot work. A robot cannot build itself, unless we make it capable of such a feat.
woman
no it doesnot work properly
It is a robot that learns from what people say. Kind of like the robot in the incredibles...it learns more moves when a human does them
that time robot was make to do work and for fashion show
it depends what kind of robot! lol