News
Wildlife officials in the Florida Everglades are flipping the script on predator versus prey with robotic rabbits. Watch this ...
The robot arm can catch objects such as a ball, bottle or tennis racket. (Screenshot, EPFL) There are some things a robot can't do, but catching a flying object is no longer one of them.
Seen from the air, a Florida freshwater spring is a bit of liquid heaven, luring humans and wildlife to enjoy its aquamarine ...
Disney Research has created an animatronic robot that can play catch and juggle balls with a human partner.
Burmese pythons pose a huge threat to native species in the Florida Everglades. Officials have used creative methods to ...
Researchers at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland have developed a robotic arm capable of processing and catching moving objects in just a fraction of a second ...
Catching a ball is one thing—it's symmetrical and flies in a predictable path. But with a hammer or a racket, the part a human or robot hand wants to catch, the handle, does not always ...
At Robot Captain Crabs Cajun Seafood & Bar, five battery-powered machines, which the restaurant's website refers to as the business's "robot family," have been part of the operation for about a week.
Disney's new catching robot sparks curiosity and concern about technology's role in entertainment.
With jerky determination, robots played soccer, wowed children with shadow-boxing skills and shot arrows on Monday at the birthplace of the Olympic Games.
With its four-fingered, three-jointed hand, a new robot can catch a ball thrown in its direction in less than five-hundredths of a second.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results