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A video shared on Facebook purports to show a robot cutting Tesla CEO and owner of X, Elon Musk’s hair. Screenshot captured via Facebook Verdict: False An artificial intelligence (AI) expert ...
The company was originally conceptualized as the educational division of Robot App Store. [19] [20] The company eventually spun off into a separate entity and relocated to San Francisco in 2011 and changed its name to RobotLAB Inc. [18] The company developed a STEM teaching tool, called the RobotsLAB Box. [19]
The team of researchers developed the arachno-bot as a means to improve pilot-controlled robotics. The arachno-bot’s name originates from the distinct shape of the robot, as its 8 legs resemble a spider’s. Each leg consists of a spider-inspired electro-hydraulic soft-actuated joint (S.E.S) which is the core of an arachno-bot.
Robot software "drag-and-drop" interface for setting up goals, tasks and routes for autonomous robots. (Courtesy of MobileRobots Inc) PatrolBot is a robotic base used for delivery, security, sensor monitoring, inspection, and guidance tasks. It is a reference platform added onto with various carrying attachments, sensors, touchscreens and cameras.
In other words, it's just like the Robot Unicorn Attack on Facebook that we loved way back in 2010, but given the Six Million Dollar Man treatment (unfortunately sans the awesome sound effect). In ...
Built Robotics Inc. is a San Francisco, California, based vehicular automation startup that develops software and hardware to automate construction equipment.The company was founded in San Francisco in 2016 by Noah Ready-Campbell and Andrew Liang. [1]
B-Daman (ビーダマン, Bīdaman) is a marble shooting toy franchise produced in Japan by Takara.It was originally based on the Bomberman series, but later expanded into other franchises and its own original designs.
Rethink Robotics was founded in 2008 [3] as a startup aiming to create low-cost robots. [6] In 2012, they released the robot Baxter. [7] In 2015, they released a smaller and more flexible counterpart to Baxter, Sawyer, that was designed to perform smaller, more detailed tasks.