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Standing at 1.5 inches tall — roughly the size of a LEGO minifigure — “Zippy” the robot can skip, climb, turn and walk. Additionally, the robot is comprised of a self-contained system that includes a ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNVideo: Humanoid robots clash in tug of war, pull cart, open doors to build resilienceCMU's FALCON system helps humanoid robots walk steadily and handle tough forceful tasks like cart-pulling and door-opening.
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Tech Xplore on MSNWorld's smallest self-powered bipedal robot achieves record speed and agility with simple mechanical designAt less than one and a half inches tall, roughly the same height as a LEGO minifigure, the world's smallest self-contained ...
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Carnegie Mellon recycling robot may help keep costs down by tearing apart old electronicsWith prices of everything going up, recycling helps keep prices down. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University’s Robotics Institute are doing what they can by developing a robot that ...
Arm and SoftBank Group Corp. (SBG) today announced that Arm and SBG will contribute USD 15.5 million to CMU to support its partnership with Keio University (Keio), a collaboration to accelerate the ...
It was an idea born in a Carnegie Mellon University robotics lab and another example ... a career path in computer science or mechanical engineering, I think this is a big step forward for the ...
At just under one and a half inches tall—about the height of a LEGO minifigure—Zippy is the world’s smallest self-powered ...
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have introduced LegoGPT, a system that generates physically stable and buildable ...
Carnegie Mellon University has introduced LegoGPT, an AI model that generates 3D Lego structures from written descriptions.
Imagine a wrist brace that allows you to move your wrist when you need it and locks it safely in place when you don’t. Or ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNWearables with tunable stiffness mimic touch, adapt motion, and remember shapeResearchers unveil algorithm for tunable metastructures with 6DOF, powering next-gen wearable, robotic, and aerospace systems.
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University’s Robotics Institute are doing what they can by developing a robot that, in seconds, takes apart old electronics. It helps get to the gold, silver ...
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