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MIT's Mini Cheetah has managed to set a new record for the fastest run speed ever recorded in the robot thanks to a new learning method.
A team of researchers at MIT have figured out a way to make a four-legged, cheetah-like robot run and jump more gracefully and efficiently. To get there, they studied animals like dogs and cats ...
MIT’s robot cheetah may also reach a theoretical speed of up to 30 mph in the future, but the current testing speed is at around 10 mph. Impressively, the robot can continue running even after ...
"When the robot is running, at every step, we calculate the appropriate amount of the force to the legs so that the robot can balance itself," said MIT research scientist Hae-Won Park, who wrote ...
The cheetah is off the leash! Researchers at MIT have built a four-legged robot that runs like the super-fast spotted feline and can even run on its own power, off a treadmill. The robot has now ...
This video actually shows the robot cheetah clearing obstacles just over 15-inches tall while running, and without the need for a single cable tether while it’s being tested outside the lab. MIT ...
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) recently unveiled a new video of its Mini Cheetah robot, demonstrating that the four-legged android can now dribble a soccer ball, run and jump.
Now, a newly revamped robot from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) dubbed the “mini cheetah” is vying to be among the fastest technologies of its kind when it comes to running.
There's a new version of a very quick quadrupedal robot from MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). While four-legged robots have garnered no end of attention over ...
MIT not only found a way to make an electric motor that's just as powerful as hydraulics, but the Cheetah can also jump over obstacles 33 centimeters in height (13 inches).
MIT's robotic cheetah has been given another upgrade in the form of a LIDAR system, allowing it to detect and leap over obstacles in its path.