Tech Xplore on MSN
Humanoid robots that 'catch themselves' instead of falling: What a new walking algorithm changes
While the statement, "Humanoid robots are coming," might cause anxiety for some, for one Georgia Tech research team, working with humanlike robots couldn't be more exciting. The researchers have ...
Meet ANYmal, a four-legged dog-like robot designed by researchers at ETH Zürich in Switzerland, in hopes of using such robots for search-and-rescue on building sites or disaster areas, among other ...
India’s first commercial four-legged robot is redefining industrial operations, executing hazardous tasks and powering ...
MOUNT HOOD, Ore. — At 7,000 feet, along the Magic Mile chair lift, there’s still plenty of snow for almost late June, but there’s a group interested in not just the freshly carved slopes but something ...
PORTLAND, Oregon — Around 6,000 feet up Mount Hood, a team of engineers and scientists are teaching a dog-like robot how to walk across the mountain's terrain. The robot, named Spirit, uses its four ...
A Chinese firm has released a comprehensive suite of open-source resources to lower technical barriers in humanoid robots' development. The new suite by EngineAI Robotics', based in Shenzhen, provides ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Video: New control system makes bipedal robots 81% more stable on uneven ground
Humanoid robots are getting better at catching themselves before they fall. Researchers at Georgia ...
Gavin Kenneally, co-founder and CEO of Ghost Robotics, discusses the design and function of the Vision 60 quadruped robots in the latest podcast episode.
On rocky outcrops 6,000 feet up Mount Hood’s ski slopes, Spirit the robot took one small step for robots, one giant leap for science. “It’s literally a robotic dog form,” said Feifei Qian, an ...
SEOUL, Aug. 7 (UPI) --A South Korean consortium is planning to develop a four-legged robot that could help save people from fires and extinguish flames, Rainbow Robotics announced Monday. With a ...
A small research group from the University of Michigan has developed a three-legged skating/shuffling robot called SKOOTR that rolls as it walks, can move along in any direction and can even rise up ...
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