Interesting Engineering on MSN
Like a flowing material: Robot swarm uses physics, not commands to self-organize
Engineers at Cornell University have developed a robotic system that behaves more like a ...
Ok, this is impressive. So much of the rest of the hype around "AI" is, to be very frank, disappointing at best. If those physics simulations were, indeed, created through prompts instead of manually, ...
Typical jumping behavior of a spherical shell obtained from simulation: it jumps from the inverted configuration back to its original shape. Inspired by a simple children's toy, a jumping popper toy, ...
Researchers reveal the physics of jumping shell structures, improving control and agility in soft robots inspired by the mechanics of a simple popper toy. The team meticulously analyzed the jumping ...
Physics has a reputation as a tough upper-level science course, even at the high school level. It's therefore somewhat ironic that every human on Earth performs thousands of physics calculations on a ...
Say hello to Argus, a 20-legged, blob-looking robot capable of seeing in all directions at the same time and able to move ...
Over the past few years, the robotics industry has chased one trend after another: humanoids, quadrupeds, robotic arms, and ...
In brief: In what is certainly one of the quirkiest science demonstrations we've seen, researchers have taken inspiration from a phenomenon observed in Cheerios to create tiny robots powered by vodka.
The robots and demos getting attention right now are products. The robots quietly reshaping logistics, manufacturing and ...
The California startup released the fourth-generation of its home assistance robot, Stretch.
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