What if doing your chores were as easy as flipping a switch? In this talk and live demo, roboticist and founder of 1X Bernt Børnich introduces NEO, a humanoid robot designed to help you out around the ...
Researchers in Denmark are building a robot that points to the future of e-waste recycling. It could benefit both he planet — ...
Diligent Robotics co-founder Vivian Chu said her "minimum viable humanoid" robots are already helping hospital staff save ...
Hosted on MSN
Very few people know how to make a simple chain
Discover the art of crafting a simple chain in this detailed tutorial. Many people believe this skill is complex, but our step-by-step guide demonstrates just how accessible it can be. Whether you're ...
Having nailed the laundry — including loading the washer and later folding everything up — the Figure 02 humanoid robot is now taking on the task of loading the dishwasher. And it seems to have nailed ...
Atlas, Boston Dynamics’ dancing humanoid, can now use a single model for walking and grasping—a significant step toward general-purpose robot algorithms.
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.
With RoboBallet, the complexity of computation also grew with the complexity of the system, but at a far slower rate. (The ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
The MOTIF Hand: A tool advancing the capabilities of previous robot hand technology
Growing up, we learn to push just hard enough to move a box and to avoid touching a hot pan with our bare hands. Now, a robot ...
The activities of robotic arms, automated guided vehicles and cobots must be synchronised for task execution to work in ...
Nohtal Partansky’s Sorting Robotics equipment is used by some of the biggest names in the cannabis industry, from Stiiizy to Tilray. Now he’s gearing up for when Big Tobacco is ready to roll. Inside ...
From left, engineering professor Morteza Lahijanian and graduate student Karan Muvvala watch as a robotic arm completes a task using wooden blocks. Imagine for a moment that you’re in an auto factory.
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