Interesting Engineering on MSN
Video: Muscular humanoid robot folds towel autonomously after watching human
The KR-1 robot is an autonomous humanoid warehouse robot designed for pick-and-place and material handling. With dual arms, a ...
France-based InBolt, which has operations in Detroit, has launched its next-generation bin-picking solution, an AI-enhanced ...
Researchers at the University of Tokyo have created a two-legged biohybrid robot, combining an artificial skeleton with biological muscle, which is capable of walking and pivoting underwater. Typical ...
Sometimes nature provides the best blueprints for building effective robots. It also can provide the best material. Billions of years of natural selection has built some pretty impressive machinery, ...
It's not clear that anyone was asking for a company to build a muscular, sinewy robot or to see a video of it dangling, helpless from a hook, but life is full of surprises and this YouTube video of ...
Engineers designed modular, spring-like devices to maximize the work of live muscle fibers so they can be harnessed to power biohybrid robots. Our muscles are nature's perfect actuators -- devices ...
Looking to pave the way for the production of nimble robots that can move more like living creatures than bulky androids, Army Research Laboratory scientists are embarking on fresh, high-risk studies ...
The world’s smallest fully programmable, autonomous robots have debuted at the University of Pennsylvania, sporting a brain ...
First, they walked. Then, they saw the light. Now, miniature biological robots have gained a new trick: remote control. The hybrid “eBiobots” are the first to combine soft materials, living muscle, ...
Jack has a degree in Medical Genetics from the University of Leicester.View full profile Jack has a degree in Medical Genetics from the University of Leicester. A Polish robotics engineer has ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Air-powered soft robots think, sense and move with no electronics
Robots that move, sense and even coordinate with one another usually bring to mind tangled wires, circuit boards and humming ...
The U.S. Army is looking into using animal muscle tissue as a means to move robots. The Army Research Laboratory believes its bots could use real muscle, which allows most living things to move and ...
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