Tech Xplore on MSN
Robotic arm inspired by octopus uses tactile sensors in suction cups for autonomous underwater grasping
The oceans hide some of the most sophisticated solutions nature has ever developed and are an inexhaustible source of ...
Aerospace and Mechanical Insider on MSN
UK robotics startups driving engineering innovation
Artificial intelligence has become inseparable from modern robotics, with physical systems increasingly managed by algorithms ...
What if building a robotic arm didn’t require a massive budget or a team of engineers? Imagine a device capable of delivering smooth, precise movements for studio applications, constructed for less ...
Scientists in Italy have developed a remarkable robotic arm inspired by the octopus, one of the ocean’s most skilled and ...
Steve & Stanley spent two years creating a six degrees of freedom (6-DOF) robotic arm from scratch, combining mechanical engineering, electronics and software into a unified system. Their process ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Three-armed kitchen robot cuts raw salmon with 95% touch-sensing accuracy
Industrial robots have mastered many repetitive tasks, but preparing sashimi remains a surprisingly difficult ...
A new type of gamma-ray sensor developed by NASA, called AstroPix, will take part in a robotic arm demonstration on the ...
From R2-D2 to Optimus Prime, Wall-E to The Iron Giant, robots have long captured our collective imaginations. In today’s world, their influence is far less limited to fictional settings; robotics are ...
A $2,500 pair of humanoid robot legs built from 3D-printed parts and off-the-shelf components is not going to win marathons just yet. But such relatively inexpensive hardware could enable researchers ...
The Advanced Robotics for Manufacturing Institute is a Manufacturing Innovation Institute funded by the Office of the Secretary of Defense (Courtesy the ARM Institute) See more of our stories in your ...
An octopus-inspired soft robotic arm that is capable of sensing contact, estimating the intensity and direction of the applied force, and grasping objects autonomously, even in complex environments ...
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