Alcremie is so good, you want to eat it. Now you can with this recipe that's faithful to its real-life tastiness! Here's how ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Classical Indian dance is teaching robots how to move and use their hands
Researchers at the University of Maryland studied how the brain controls complex hand movements, focusing on Bharatanatyam dance gestures called mudras.
Ashwathi Menon, co-captain of UMBC's Indian fusion dance team, helps demo some of the technology in the lab. Here, she demonstrates the Katakamukha mudra as a robotic hand mimics her gesture. Parthan ...
13don MSN
Humanoid robots are coming, but there's still a design challenge: making us like and trust them
Humanoid robots may be part of our future, but human psychology and the uncanny valley may stand between them and world ...
Younger wine lovers crave authenticity and immersive experiences, and more wineries will woo them with local adventures. The ...
The RealDoll has been the gold standard of lifelike dolls for years, and the RealDoll X project throws AI-powered smarts into the mix. The result? A talking, animatronic head named Harmony that ...
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.
Chelsea and England legend Frank Lampard sparked a Championship melee after celebrating Coventry City's hard-fought draw ...
The researchers behind the recent work, based in China, decided to implement something similar for an artificial skin that ...
In a joint advance from the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Michigan, engineers have designed the smallest fully programmable autonomous robots ever built – ...
The human hand is amazingly complex. With 34 muscles, more than 30 tendons, and 27 bones, hands can grasp objects, express emotion, create works of art, and accomplish many of the tasks that drive ...
In 1980, the first industrial robot arm could move six axes with brute strength, but it couldn’t pick up a strawberry without crushing it. Four decades later, robotic arms are faster, safer, and ...
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