Interesting Engineering on MSN
New self-healing artificial ‘pain nerves’ could give humanoid robots human-like reflexes
Chinese researchers have built a self-healing gelatin sensor that lets robots rate pain and protect themselves after damage.
A gelatin memristor with 16 stable conductance states mimics biological pain perception, rating intensity, sensitizing after ...
A new artificial skin unveiled at CES 2026 could give robots human-like sensitivity, helping machines better understand ...
Scientists have built microscopic, light-powered robots that can think, swim, and operate independently at the scale of ...
A guide for engineers balancing performance, reliability, and manufacturability across today’s smart systems By Barry Brents, ...
IN 2026, The Wuffy Robot Puppy has gained massive attention online through eye-catching ads and promotional videos claiming ...
Robots that move, sense and even coordinate with one another usually bring to mind tangled wires, circuit boards and humming ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
One image is all robots need to find their way
While the capabilities of robots have improved significantly over the past decades, they are not always able to reliably and ...
Humanoid, a UK-based AI and robotics company, is accelerating the development of its humanoid robots by integrating NVI ...
Humanoid robots will be able to recharge just by stepping on this new inductive charging platform, says Figure CEO Brett ...
Researchers built autonomous robots the size of salt grains—with onboard computers, sensors, and motors that think and swim ...
Morning Overview on MSN
New wing design helps tiny robots fly farther by gliding like grasshoppers
Tiny flying robots have always faced a brutal trade-off between agility and battery life, burning through power just to stay ...
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