The Eufy E20 is a shape-shifting cleaning machine ...
Dubbed Sand-E, the beach cleaning robot was developed by 27 students from the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD). The team had wanted to come up with a solution to assist ...
Last year, robots were able to join a race without having to complete the full route. Image: UCSD/YouTube The Beijing Economic-Technological Development Area (E-Town), which is organizing the event, ...
Prizes will be awarded to the top three finishers, regardless of whether they are human or robot, as reported by the South China Morning Post (SCMP). Organized by the Beijing Economic-Technological ...
Two new videos from Chinese companies make it clear: it'll soon be no use trying to run from robots. Rapid upgrades in speed and agility mean robot dogs can now sprint at near-Olympic pace ...
Move over bees, MIT researchers have developed a robot insect designed for artificial pollination, laying the groundwork for entirely indoor farms of the future. The robot’s lifelike flapping wings ...
Researchers have enabled China’s Unitree humanoid robot G1 to master the art of waltzing by mirroring human movements. For this, a team at the University of California, San Diego, has developed ...
China proved that a quadruped robot dog can run 100 meters in less than 10 seconds. Enter Black Panther 2.0, an out-of-this-world creation that can even outpace some of the fastest humans on the ...
Researchers from the University of California, San Diego have designed an AI-enabled robot that can perform a Waltz simply by mirroring the moves of its human partner. As far as we can tell ...
Currently, robots and robotic systems are not classed as electronic waste, however the authors argue that they meet current definitions and will therefore be likely to be included in scope of e ...
An AI that helps humanoid robots mirror a person’s movement could allow robots to walk, dance and fight in more convincingly human ways. The most agile and fluid robotic movements, such as ...
Researchers from the University of Bristol and the University of the West of England have emphasized the need for the robotics industry to design robots with reprogrammability and repurposing in mind.
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