A video making its rounds on social media shows an engineer from a startup called Skild AI taking a chainsaw to the limbs of a robot dog.
Incremental gains in dexterity can convert robots from lab curiosities into integral tools for key global industries.
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Fidget-controlled robots show the power of metastability
Fidget poppers are an example of "bistability," as the popped circles rest in one of two stable states. Purdue University researchers have taken this idea to its extreme, building robots that can be ...
An advancement in robotic flight shows how advanced electronics and reconfigurable mechanisms are enabling machines to mimic ...
If the Google driverless car makes you feel a bit uneasy, how will you cope with bacteria-driven robots? Such robots, declare Virginia Tech scientists, could have “brains” that rely not on ...
A recent study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences introduces a new approach to coordinating ...
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Ant swarm simulation unlocks possibilities in materials engineering, robot navigation and traffic control
Think twice about eliminating those pesky ants at your next family picnic. Their behavior may hold the key to reinventing how ...
Healthcare systems worldwide are struggling with overcrowded hospitals, physician burnout, and rising surgery delays. Which is why it’s always a good thing to see research exploring new solutions ...
The mere thought of controlling a robot is good enough for the Australian Army. In a new test, the land force has paired with a host of technology researchers to use telepathy to control robot dogs, ...
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