News
For more information, you alsoshould read "Robot Control with Biological Cells" (PDF format, 15 pages, 262 KB). So will we soon see biological cells becoming an integral part of robotic devices?
11d
Live Science on MSNMIT's new AI can teach itself to control robots by watching the world through their eyes — it only needs a single camera
The new training method doesn't use sensors or onboard control tweaks, but a single camera that watches the robot's movements ...
A new method helps robots hold things by changing their movement instead of squeezing harder. It works for soft, slippery, or ...
4d
Tech Xplore on MSNInnovative robotic slip-prevention method could bring human-like dexterity to industrial automation
A new slip-prevention method has been shown to improve how robots grip and handle fragile, slippery or asymmetric objects, ...
ABB is reinforcing its robotics leadership in China with the launch of three new robot families. Aimed at meeting increasing ...
Robots that can jump have been seen before, but a robot that jumps all the time is a little different. Salto-1P is a one-legged jumping robot at UC Berkeley, and back in 2017 it demonstrated the ab… ...
Sketches have rich spatial information to help the robot carry out its tasks without getting confused by the clutter of realistic images or the ambiguity of natural language instructions.
Toshiba Corp., in its first Robodex appearance, proposed a new open architecture for robotics and showed a prototype home robot based upon it. A Fujitsu Ltd. subsidiary unveiled a motion control ...
Robotic mowers are becoming a common sight in some places, enabled by the cost of motors and the needed control electronics being much lower, thanks to the pace of modern engineering. But, in many … ...
Enabling varied supply chains while minimizing risk The adoption of AI-driven robotic pick-and-pack systems will be essential over the next decade to increase efficiency, reduce costs and meet rising ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results