California startups are building robots to help with fold laundry and other tedious tasks as the race to dominate artificial ...
Study Finds on MSN
Cell-Sized Robots Can Sense, Decide, And Move Without Outside Control
Cell-sized robots can sense temperature, make decisions, and move autonomously using nanowatts of power—no external control ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
'Robot, make me a chair': AI-driven system designs, builds multicomponent objects from user prompts
Computer-aided design (CAD) systems are tried-and-true tools used to design many of the physical objects we use each day. But ...
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania and University of Michigan have created the world’s smallest fully programmable ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Sub-millimeter-sized robots can sense, 'think' and act on their own
Robots small enough to travel autonomously through the human body to repair damaged sites may seem the stuff of science ...
Machine touted as first tiny robot to be able to sense, think and act, envisioning a future of use inside human body.
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists built a robot smaller than a salt grain that thinks
The newest frontier in robotics is almost invisible to the naked eye. Researchers have built a robot smaller than a grain of ...
In 1982, personal computers were beige, boxy, and built for engineers. They were powerful, but uninviting. Few people knew what they were for, or why they might need one. It took more than just better ...
In context: Teaching robots new skills has traditionally been slow and painstaking, requiring hours of step-by-step demonstrations for even the simplest tasks. If a robot encountered something ...
Professor Boyuan Chen poses with some of his 3D printed robots that were designed and built through his new platform called Text2Robot that allows people to simply tell a computer what kind of robot ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
World’s smallest programmable robots think, swim, and sense temperature using light
Scientists unveil penny-sized microrobots that swim, sense temperature, and run for months using light-powered brains.
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