From household robots to reusable rockets, a new wave of breakthrough inventions is redefining what humans can do in space and on Earth. These advances are not isolated gadgets, they are tightly ...
In today’s rapidly advancing technological landscape, the concept of humanoid robots no longer belongs to the realm of ...
Hidden lava tunnels on the Moon and Mars could one day shelter human explorers, offering natural protection from radiation and space debris. A European research team has unveiled a bold new mission ...
Cosmos policy describes how NVIDIA has adapted an existing video prediction system for use in robotics. The model was first ...
In the future, a caregiving machine might gently lift an elderly person out of bed in the morning and help them get dressed. A cleaning bot could trundle through a child’s room, picking up scattered ...
Meet Moya, the lifelike humanoid robot from Shanghai that smiles, walks, and holds eye contact like a human. Could this mark ...
Scientists create smallest programmable robots ever - smaller than salt grains, these breakthrough microscopic machines could ...
China’s Unitree G1 humanoid robot has successfully completed an extreme cold test in Xinjiang, walking through deep snow at ...
insights from industryBernd GleixnerDivision President AutomationBruker Biopsin News Medical speaks to Bernd Gleixner, Division President Automation at Bruker Biospin, about the future of lab ...
Since the mid-20th century, the concept of machines performing human tasks has evolved from science fiction into everyday reality. The goal has never been to replace humans, but rather to enhance ...
In 1980, the first industrial robot arm could move six axes with brute strength, but it couldn’t pick up a strawberry without crushing it. Four decades later, robotic arms are faster, safer, and ...
Purdue University’s Colleges of Science, Engineering, and Agriculture—together with the Purdue Office of Industry Partnerships and Purdue Polytechnic Institute—proudly present Robotics Day, a ...