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Researchers make incredible breakthrough after building robotic flying bugs: 'Real lightweight and small'
They can do double flips and rolls. Researchers make incredible breakthrough after building robotic flying bugs: 'Real lightweight and small' first appeared on The Cool Down.
Ripple bugs’ nimble movements on the surface of water inspired a robot with automatically unfurling fans on its feet.
The design theory behind a pair of tiny insect-inspired obots may one day find its way into environmental monitoring, surgery procedures, as well as search-and-rescue missions—all while, reportedly, ...
A little bug-inspired robot created by a team of engineers at the University of Colorado Boulder has the potential to someday aid first responders during disasters. The robot’s name is CLARI, which ...
Scientists in Germany are hard at work on an autonomous, pill-bug-like robot to be used to fight forest fires. It’s got legs like the little insect, and if the going gets too hot, it can retract them ...
Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. The term “necrobotics” is relatively self-explanatory—using ...
Rowdy tourists and migrating birds share a park with a Roomba-like grass clipper. What could possibly go wrong?
Researchers combined soft microactuators with high-energy-density chemical fuel to create an insect-scale quadrupedal robot that is powered by combustion and can outrace, outlift, outflex and outleap ...
Who would have thought that in 2025, we would still witness humans 'bullying' robots, and that it would become a huge hit on overseas social media? Recently, a video showing the 'abuse' of the Yushu ...
An industry based on insects’ natural recycling abilities could help limit the environmental damage from our food system.
This is Sarcos, a robot Carnegie Mellon grad student Ben Stephens is teaching to emulate human movements using motion capture technology. Check out this unblinking bot mimic human dancing in this clip ...
One robot weighs 55 milligrams, while its parter is just 5 milligrams. Developed by a team of WSU researchers and recently presented at the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society’s International ...
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