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New Atlas · Robotics
- 01$8,000 robot is ready to take over all laundry and bed-making dutiesWeave Robotics announced its first robot for folding laundry just five months ago, and it already has a new product on offer. Like its predecessor, the new Isaac 1 robot also folds clothes. But unlike the old model, this one can tidy up your living room and make the bed on demand. It looks cuter, too. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Artificial Intelligence , Tele-operation , assistant robotAbhimanyu Ghoshal
- 02Soft-yet-firm robohand assesses the ripeness of produce that it picksAgriculture is one of the industries that is getting increasingly affected by robotics, which totally makes sense, as farmers around the world face human labor shortages and also rising labor costs. For some crops, labor accounts for almost 50% of production expenses. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: West Virginia University , Agriculture , Fruit , Vegetables , Crops , HandMaryna Holovnova
- 03Lizard-inspired wiggly wheels let Mars rover swim through sandThe sandfish lizard moves very efficiently through the sands of the Sahara desert, and not surprisingly, it doesn't use wheels to do so. Scientists have now copied the reptile's swimming motion in an experimental Mars rover that outperforms others in sandy soil. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: locomotion , Biomimicry , Wheel , Rover , MarsBen Coxworth
- 04Octopus-like robo-arm thinks with its suckers to explore the ocean floorRobots exploring the ocean floor today use pre-programmed movements, centralized processors, and rigid structures to do their work. But the sea is unpredictable, and that architecture struggles wherever currents shift, visibility drops, or terrain changes without warning. Now, researchers at the Italian Institute of Technology (IIT) have taken a very different approach to sidestep all of that – one 500 million years in the making. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Italian IOmar Kardoudi
- 05Soft robots with squishy hearts demonstrate next-level flexibilitySoft robots have a “cardiovascular” problem. While their bodies can deform and bend, their hearts, the pumps that keep them moving, have remained bulky and rigid. Researchers at the University of Bristol have created a “soft” miniature pump that weighs about as much as a single dried pumpkin seed, but can generate enough hydraulic pressure to power soft robotic systems without bulky compressors or rigid mechanical pumps. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: University of BristEtiido Uko
- 06What has 20 eyes, 20 legs, and no front or back? Duke's Argus doesMost of nature – including humans – is symmetrical, and as creations reflect their creators, many robots we create today feature this symmetry, with the general assumption that symmetry is best. Researchers at Duke University have challenged that assumption with Argus, a sea-urchin-like robot that ditches conventional symmetry altogether. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Duke University , locomotion , Omni-DirectionalEtiido Uko
- 07Future robots could avoid damage by rolling up like armadillosNature has long served as a source of inspiration for scientific innovations. Many animals have evolved defensive features such as skins, shells, and scales to protect themselves from predators. Because protective mechanisms are essential in both biological organisms and engineered systems, a lot of these features have already been adopted in modern technologies. Recently, researchers from the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at North Carolina State University drew inspiration Maryna Holovnova
- 08Swiss Army knife-like surgical robot fits on your fingertipPicture a surgical robot that can move, cut tissue, release drugs, grip and store samples, and wirelessly generate heat. You most likely didn't imagine a robot that can fit in your hands. Yet, scientists have created a 5-in-1 robot that fits right on your fingertip! Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Nanyang Technological University , Drug delivery , Surgical robotEtiido Uko
- 09New 3D printing tech is set to give robots human-like musclesThe day is coming when you may walk past a robot and have no idea it was a robot. Over years of engineering, we've given robots skeletons, brains, senses, and even a nervous system. Muscles have proven particularly complex (not that the other things were easy). Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Harvard , 3D Printing , Artificial MusclesEtiido Uko
- 10Dissimilar robots can 'learn' to perform tasks without needing new codeIt’s fairly easy for people to learn from other people – we’ve been doing it for around 300,000 years – because we can observe, copy, and modify what they’re doing. It’s less easy for us to learn from other animals that way, because the less our cognition and bodies are alike, the harder it is to copy and modify what they do. Learning about plants, fungi, protozoa, and bacteria is easy enough, but learning from them? Forget it. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: EPFL , LearnMalcolm Azania
- 11Strap into this real-life mecha suit for just $650,000Unitree has just gone and made many a kid-at-heart's wildest dream come true. The Chinese robotics firm has created the GD01, a functional mecha suit that you can hop into and walk about on two legs or four. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Unitree , Future RobotAbhimanyu Ghoshal
- 12Heated PLA robo-octopus gripper goes limp to grapple, hard to liftCountless industrial tools and robots need to grip things, and because we humans learn to grip since infancy, we can easily underestimate how complex gripping actually is. If our grip is too rigid, we can snap or shatter our payload; if our grip is too soft, our payload may slip from our fingers or exceed lift capacity. Human hands have advantages: rigid bones covered in pliable skin and muscles. So, what’s a poor mechanism to do when it simply wants to lift? Continue Reading Category: Robotics Malcolm Azania
- 13Motion-capture exoskeletons let violinists feel each others’ subtlest movesWorld-renowned science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke (2001: A Space Odyssey, Childhood’s End) once quipped that “Any teacher who can be replaced by a computer should be.” Some people think Clarke’s statement means we should replace all teachers. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Exoskeleton , Education , Training aid , Ghent University , ViolinMalcolm Azania
- 14SAIL tech lets robots perform human-scale tasks far more quicklyThanks to researchers at Georgia Tech, robots have taken several new steps towards replacing human labor – and not simply for dangerous tasks such as mining the depths of the Earth and exploring the Moon, or difficult tasks such as high-speed mass-assembly of thousands of cars. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Georgia Tech , Georgia Institute of Technology , HumanoidMalcolm Azania
- 15Watch: Sony's insane autonomous robot shows off 'superhuman' skillsFlying under the radar of robot hype, Sony AI's Ace has shown off its rapid-speed learning abilities that are seriously remarkable, displaying powerful split-second decision-making while taking on some of the best table tennis players – and winning. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Sony , Sport , Autonomous , Self-Learning , Robotic constructionBronwyn Thompson
- 16Just call these tiny autonomous construction robots “antdroids”Roboticists at Harvard and the Indian Institute of Technology Madras – very smart folks indeed – somehow entirely missed the great name “antdroids” when building the insectoid drones they call RAnts (robotic ants, which do not, in fact, rant about anything – not even against a tyrannical robotic ant queen). Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Harvard , Biomimicry , Ants , Robotic constructionMalcolm Azania
- 17Amazingly lifelike robofish is made for maintenance-free aquariumsAn aquarium can really add a touch of class to a home or business, particularly if it's got some fancy fish in it – but such fish can be very hard to keep. So, why not just buy a weirdly lifelike "robofish" like this one, that needs nothing more than a daily battery-charge? Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Fish , BiomimicryBen Coxworth
- 18Soft-bodied origami robot moves without motors or gears"Ancient Japanese Art Brings Spineless Robot To Life!" Sounds very much like a movie plot summary. In reality, it perfectly describes the work of Princeton University engineers who have created a robot that moves without a single motor or gear, using heat and the principles of origami instead. Their soft robotic system relies on a combination of heat-sensitive advanced materials, flexible embedded electronics, and carefully designed folding structures to produce motion, ditching traditional mechEtiido Uko
- 19Versatile robot uses tracked flippers to traverse varying terrainDisaster sites vary as widely as rescue missions. Using robotics to help often requires multiple robots to survey, climb, lift, or manipulate objects. Athena unites all these capabilities in a single, rugged, autonomous platform built for search and rescue. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Technical University of Darmstadt , Disasters , RescueEtiido Uko
- 20Speak! Robot guide dogs converse with their ownersSince the early 1900s, dogs have helped people who are blind or have low vision to navigate their world. Now, in a very 21st century twist, seeing-eye dogs have gone robotic and added a skill that not even the most well-trained canine could pull off: conversation. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Unitree , Dogs , Binghamton University , BlindnessMichael Franco
- 21Ultrasonic wristband used to track hand movements like never beforeDespite decades of technological progress, robots still can’t move as smoothly as humans – they drop objects, and struggle to pick them up properly. Scientists have been trying to teach robots to move with the same precision as humans, but hand movement is more complex than it might seem at first glance. Even a simple action, like holding and scrolling your phone, uses dozens of small muscles, joints, and over 100 tendons and ligaments working together. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , EngiMaryna Holovnova
- 22Robotic legs skate, climb stairs, and balance on one wheel in demo videoThe Robotics and AI Institute (RAI) has just released a video of its Roadrunner robot. Although it lacks a torso, the bipedal bot more than makes up for it by rolling, stomping, stair-climbing, and even showing off while using only one of its legs. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Future Robot , RAI , Boston Dynamics , bipedMichael Franco
- 23AI-evolved adaptable robot is almost impossible to destroyIt took nature millions of years to create intelligent, adaptive species. Researchers at Northwestern University in Illinois are using AI to evolve robots in minutes. The result is a robot that is agile, highly adaptive, and technically indestructible. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Northwestern University , Artificial Intelligence , adaptiveEtiido Uko
- 24Bio-inspired robo-dolphin could soon be vacuuming oil off the sea's surfaceWhen it comes to systems for cleaning up marine oil spills, most of them simply float in place, waiting for the oil to come to them. A new robot, however, could proactively move through oil slicks – and it's inspired by both a dolphin and a sea urchin. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: RMIT University , Environment , Oil , BiomimicryBen Coxworth
- 25Fish-like robotic fin lets underwater robots glide through turbulenceIf someone asked you to move like a robot and you responded with the fluid art of ballet, your audience would be baffled, yet technically, you would be right. Robots are famous for their characteristic rigid movement, which is useful in some applications but can hinder adaptability. Now, researchers have developed a robotic wing that moves like no other. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Soft Robotics , Biomimicry , University of Southampton , University of Edinburgh , DelfEtiido Uko
- 26Watch: World's first robot movie found after more than a centuryA piece of techno-cinematic history has emerged as the US Library of Congress releases the restored video of the oldest film to feature a "robot." Dating from 1897, the silent film Gugusse et l'Automate by George Méliès was thought lost until recently. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Library , Films , Robotic , HistoryDavid Szondy
- 27Video: Hyundai's firefighting robots lead the way into burning buildingsHyundai has donated four super-tough unmanned robotic vehicles to firefighters in Korea for use in high-risk situations. The autonomous vehicles will deal with the initial stages of a fire to provide more information and safety to firefighters. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Fire , Hyundai , Autonomous Vehicles , Safety , Electric VehiclesMichael Franco
- 28This robot can fold your laundry – but not without a helping handLess than two years since it was founded, San Francisco-based startup Weave Robotics is accepting pre-orders for its first home robot, which promises to do one thing well: fold your laundry. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Robots , Tele-operation , assistant robotAbhimanyu Ghoshal
- 29Revolutionary reversible robo-hand can crawl away from its armWhat has opposable thumbs and is the most dexterous tool on the planet? The human hand, obviously. Well … not anymore. At least according to engineers at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne’s (EPFL) school of engineering, who have developed a robotic hand capable of outperforming human dexterity in controlled manipulation tasks. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: EPFL , HandEtiido Uko
- 30Lip-syncing robot watches your face to speak like youWhen it comes to ultra-humanlike Westworld-style robots, one of their most defining features are lips that move in perfect sync with their spoken words. A new robot not only sports that feature, but it can actually train itself to speak like a person. Continue Reading Category: Robotics , Engineering Tags: Columbia University , Artificial Intelligence , Voice , FacialBen Coxworth
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