Robots are taking over John Harris Elementary, but don’t worry, the students are in control. Gifted-education students are programming land rovers to get through an obstacle course of sorts. The ...
You've seen apps and toys that promise to teach your child to code. Now enter the robots. At the CES electronics show in January, coding robots came out in force. One convention hall area was packed ...
(TNS) — Gib Olinger and Ferndale elementary schools in Milton-Freewater were recently awarded a combined $15,000 in GO STEM grants to purchase new technology. The grant comes from Eastern Oregon ...
Anthropic believes AI models will increasingly reach into the physical world. To understand where things are headed, it asked ...
(TNS) — Just like there's more than one way to solve a problem, there's more than one way to grow problem solvers. Guilford County Schools has two new school-choice programs set to start next school ...
Moto.com did some robotic testing of the sensitivity and precision of the latest crop of smartphone touchscreens and the iPhone wins the day. The test consisted of using a robot to slowly draw ...
Toy robots are nothing new. In the 1980s, the R2D2-like Tomy Verbot or the clunky Milton Bradley Big Trak let kids program their movements or actions using voice commands or a keypad. The marketing ...
Over the past few years, I’ve wanted to learn more about coding, beyond my basic understanding of HTML and CSS. I started out on Codecademy learning basic front-end web stuff, then got into learning a ...
Teaching kids to talk tech is all the rage these days. It’s not uncommon to see coding listed among the languages offered at schools. But tech-powered playthings mostly offer a passive experience with ...
From sorting objects in a warehouse to navigating furniture while vacuuming, robots today use sensors, software control systems, and moving parts to perform tasks. The harder the task or more complex ...
My five- and seven-year-old constantly fight over who gets the iPad first. We have one, and they get to use it in tiny doses, usually when I'm at my wit's end. Their favorite app? ScratchJr, MIT's ...