Robot skin that senses touch and pain — and triggers instant reflexes — makes robots more like humans. It probably also makes ...
For example, mobile robots in 1970 could move at a speed of only 6 meters per hour. This would involve movement in 1-meter increments separated by 10-minute processing breaks, and after a while many ...
In an unprecedented move, NVIDIA has unveiled a cutting-edge lineup of next-generation robots, promising to transform industries across the globe.
Object avoidance is a tough nut to crack on robot vacuums, but Narwal's new Flow 2 promises it has the best yet with a mix of ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
New robotic skin lets humanoid robots sense pain and react instantly
If you accidentally put your hand on a hot object, you'll naturally pull it away fast, before you have to think about it.
ROBOTCORE® is a processing unit for the robotics architect that maps robotics computations efficiently to its CPUs, GPU and FPGA to obtain faster robots and with additional real-time capabilities.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
China develops neuromorphic e-skin that lets humanoid robots sense pain and react
Researchers in China built a neuromorphic robotic skin that lets humanoid robots sense pain and react instantly to harm.
Qualcomm Technologies Inc. today debuted the Dragonwing IQ10, a system-on-chip optimized to power humanoid robots. The ...
Explore how neuromorphic chips and brain-inspired computing bring low-power, efficient intelligence to edge AI, robotics, and ...
Intel’s Xeon server chips dominate hardware in data centers, and now they could also end up powering robots on factory floors. The new line of Xeon D chips, announced Monday, are designed primarily ...
Researchers from Swinburne University of Technology have developed a robotic prototype designed to help staff automate the processing of blood donation packs. Currently, processing blood donation is a ...
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