Biologists and engineers have joined forces to build a new robot bat that’s helping us understand how real bats use ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Handy robot can crawl and pick up objects from multiple angles
Like something out of the Addams Family, scientists have created a detachable robotic hand that can crawl and grab objects.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
New adaptive system lets robots replicate human touch with far less training data
Researchers in Japan have developed an adaptive motion reproduction system that allows robots to ...
With up to six fingers that can bend in multiple directions, the innovative tool could one day be used to carry out tasks in ...
Beyond object tracking, the Moto Tag 2 includes a button for remote camera capture and reverse location tracking (Find My ...
The robot can bend, grasp and carry in ways humans can’t, which could help it navigate spaces too confined for human arms.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
US researchers build fall-safe biped robots to advance real-world reinforcement learning
Researchers in the US developed bipedal robots with a new design, the HybridLeg platform, ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Adaptive motion system helps robots achieve human-like dexterity with minimal data
Despite rapid robotic automation advancements, most systems struggle to adapt their pre-trained movements to dynamic ...
IFLScience on MSN
Watch this incredible handy robot detach, scuttle around like a spider, and pick up objects
The human hand is often hailed as the “pinnacle of dexterity”, but there’s always room for improvement. In a new study, ...
YouTube on MSN
Tracked tank mobile robot RC platform with Arduino
This product is courtesy of It was super easy to make this mobile tracked platform and radio-controlled useful for building robots and other systems. It uses Arduino to run the logic to control it ...
Most robot headlines follow a familiar script: a machine masters one narrow trick in a controlled lab, then comes the bold promise that everything is about to change. I usually tune those stories out.
Physically, sound is just pressure moving through a medium. If you harness that pressure correctly, you can actually push things around using nothing but sound. That's exactly what researchers at ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results