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Darkling beetles equipped with microchip backpacks can be guided through disaster areas using electrical signals, offering a ...
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ScienceAlert on MSNCyborg Beetles Could Be Unlikely Heroes in Future Disaster RescuesDisaster victims trapped beneath the rubble of a collapsed building or mine may one day be rescued by a tiny and unlikely ...
Chinese scientists have successfully turned bees into cyborgs by inserting controllers into their brains. In tests the bees ...
Healthcare systems worldwide are struggling with overcrowded hospitals, physician burnout, and rising surgery delays. The ...
Essentially, a robot bomb, it would be operated via remote control and transported to a location in enemy territory before being detonated.
Sphero Mini is not only the tiniest and cheapest ($50) robot ball we’ve ever seen, it’s also the first one you can control with a smile or a frown.
The tiny robot is capable of expressing dynamic facial emotions in response to human tactile handling.
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Live Science on MSNMIT's new AI can teach itself to control robots by watching the world through their eyes — it only needs a single cameraThe new training method doesn't use sensors or onboard control tweaks, but a single camera that watches the robot's movements ...
Tiny cars, big stakes: These remote control racers aren’t hobbyists. They’re pros RC cars fly through the air after a jump during the annual Dirt Nitro Challenge in Perris, Calif., March 9, 2025.
For these Southern California residents, radio-control racing is more than a hobby; it's a full-time job.
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