YouTube on MSN
How to Make Hydraulic Powered Robotic Arm from Cardboard
In this video I show you how to make robotic arm from cardboard, it's quite fun to plaw with. Especially by moving coca cola cans. You need: cardboard, 8 syringes with rubber piston, old battery, 4 ...
China has embarked on a campaign to use more robots in its factories, transforming its manufacturing industries and becoming ...
Google LLC’s DeepMind research unit today announced a major update to a couple of its artificial intelligence models, which are designed to make robots more intelligent. With the update, intelligent ...
YouTube on MSN
How to make an airplane with cardboard (glider)
Learn how to make an airplane with really basic materials, this is the way I used to make gliders when I was a little boy, so I hope you find this very helpfull, making airplanes is not as difficult ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Robots are prone to privacy leaks despite encryption
A new study from the University of Waterloo has unveiled major privacy weaknesses in collaborative robots—calling for ...
DeepMind's updated Gemini Robotics models mark a shift from single-task machines to robots that plan multi-step missions.
Robin is a therapeutic robot programed to act like a 7-year-old girl as it travels around nursing homes and hospitals ...
Futurism on MSN
New Public Toilets Make You Watch Ads to Get Toilet Paper
Social media video shows a toilet in China demanding a user watch an ad in order to receive a handful of bathroom tissue.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Novel film manufacturing technique lets robots walk on water
Imagine tiny robots zipping across the surface of a lake to check water quality or searching for people in flooded areas. This technology is moving closer to reality thanks to work by researchers at ...
The circle of nature isn’t always reflected in the circle of consumer products, too many of which take a one-way journey to ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Can Optimus make America win the humanoid robot race? Here’s the verdict
After four years of hype, Optimus shows some progress, yet the humanoid struggles to prove it's worth beyond staged demos.
Scientists have developed HydroSpread, a novel technique for building soft robots on water, with wide-ranging possibilities ...
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