Interesting Engineering on MSN
Engineers develop AI-powered wearable that turns everyday gestures into robot commands
AI-powered wearable cleans noisy motion signals to let users control machines with simple gestures in real-world conditions.
A new wearable system uses stretchable electronics and artificial intelligence to interpret human gestures with high accuracy even in chaotic, high-motion environments.
Engineers at the University of California San Diego have developed a next-generation wearable system that enables people to control machines using everyday gestures — even while running, riding in a ...
Humanoid robot training is booming around the world. Tech companies are rushing to build the robots for a market projected to ...
Anthropic believes AI models will increasingly reach into the physical world. To understand where things are headed, it asked ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Novel smart fabrics give robots a delicate grip
Robots aren't always the most delicate of machines when handling fragile objects. They don't have the lightness of touch of ...
While aboard the International Space Station, NASA astronaut Jonny Kim controlled robots on a simulated martian landscape in Germany. Credit: European Space Agency (ESA) Footage: ESA/DLR Hunter found ...
Now, researchers at the Beijing Academy of Artificial Intelligence (BAAI) have trained a Unitree G1 robot to pull a 1,400-kilogram car along a flat surface. The robot itself weighs just 35 kilograms ...
Indie game publisher No More Robots has decided to make their own game, as they have revealed their latest title, Cruise Control. This is a sim management game set on the open seas, as you'll manage a ...
Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below. Elon Musk's third-quarter earnings call wasn't just about revenue growth — it was a declaration of ...
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