"Ancient Japanese Art Brings Spineless Robot To Life!" Sounds very much like a movie plot summary. In reality, it perfectly ...
This roundup highlights the latest robotics innovations aimed at improving throughput, simplifying deployment and helping ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Interlocking materials offer high strength and flexibility for robotics, infrastructure
Researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder are developing a new class of “entangled ...
A team of scientists at Yale University has developed a new “robotic fabric” that can change its shape and stiffness on demand or by sensing its environment. The material could one day be used in high ...
Researchers at ETH Zurich, a university in Switzerland, have developed a new robotic additive manufacturing method to help make the construction industry more sustainable. Unlike concrete 3D printing, ...
GrayMatter Robotics and Path Robotics are both deepening their existing relationship with HII, one of the country's leading ...
Researchers are blurring the lines between robotics and materials, with a proof-of-concept material-like collective of robots with behaviors inspired by biology. Researchers at UC Santa Barbara and TU ...
A robotic hand with the AiFoam artificially innervated smart foam, which enables it to sense objects in proximity by detecting their electrical fields and also self-heals if it gets cut, is pictured ...
Northwestern Engineering’s Departments of Materials Science and Engineering and Mechanical Engineering have welcomed Ryan Truby to the faculty as an assistant professor. Prior to joining the McCormick ...
Milvus Robotics has officially introduced its latest advancement in industrial automation, the SEIT F1500S, a stacker-type fork autonomous mobile robot (AMR) meticulously engineered to transform ...
Scientists have developed robotic crystals that walk slowly like an inchworm and roll 20,000 times faster than its walking speed. These autonomously moving, organic crystals have great potential as ...
SINGAPORE, July 6 (Reuters) - Singapore researchers have developed a smart foam material that allows robots to sense nearby objects, and repairs itself when damaged, just like human skin. Artificially ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results