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"It's literally going to feel like a sci-fi movie," Figure AI founder Brett Adcock says.
Carnegie Mellon's noninvasive brain technology allows users to move robotic fingers by thinking about the motion, offering new possibilities for people with motor impairments.
Chinese scientists have developed the world’s lightest brain chip that can control bees, weighing just 74 milligrams. The ...
Engineers in South Korea developed a bioinspired air filter that mimics nasal mucus, trapping more particles and lasting ...
A pale orange glow spreads across the river gorge. Instead of a crowd of workers balancing on girders, a line of compact crawler bots glides forward, welding steel joints with laser accuracy. Overhead ...
Two studio owners whose clients include Jeff Koons and Maya Lin dominate machine-chiseled art. One is spending big to ...
Researchers at the AMOLF institute have created a revolutionary soft robot without electronic components that moves using ...
Agibot’s X2-N robot combines walking and wheeled modes with intuitive, sensorless navigation to tackle complex real-world terrain.
Fish make hanging motionless in the water column look effortless, and scientists had long assumed hovering was a type of rest ...
Read a summary of critic reviews for System Shock 2: 25th Anniversary Remaster. See overall scores, standout features, and ...
A paralyzed military veteran is one of seven people in the country to be implanted with an Elon Musk-backed brain chip as ...