Interesting Engineering on MSN
Bee-inspired navigation chips could unlock fleets of insect-sized robots
Bees navigate long distances without satellites, digital maps, or external guidance. By reading patterns ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Video: 6,000-pound robot helps Cornell team 3D-print concrete underwater in trials
Since its invention in the 1980s, 3D printing has steadily moved from research labs ...
San Diego Jewish Academy (SDJA) recently highlighted the SDJA Robotics “Kayefet” initiative, a unique student-run program led by Upper School students to inspire 2nd-5th grade students through ...
NEW YORK -- As the new robot called Sprout walks around a Manhattan office, nodding its rectangular head, lifting its windshield wiper-like “eyebrows” and offering to shake your hand with its grippers ...
Robots are becoming smarter and more common, but their ability to handle objects with human-like precision remains limited.
Discover the innovative high-jumping robot created by scientists at the Hawkes Lab, University of California, Santa Barbara.
Radford and his co-founders are building machines to perform what they call "dull, dirty, dangerous and declining" jobs.
The EMO humanoid learns to lip-sync speech and song by observation, producing more natural mouth movements that reduce the ...
Daily Mail on MSN
Humanoid robot accidentally kicks engineer during test in Shanghai
Footage shows a humanoid robot misjudge distance during a synchronized movement, accidentally kicking an engineer during a ...
Living with robots could lead to plenty of societal improvements, but they also pose risks to how we socialize and co-exist with other human beings.
How do stingrays keep from crashing into the ocean floor as they effortlessly swim just above it? This is what a recent study published in the Journal of t | Technology ...
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