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A Breakthrough in Soft Robot Muscles, Funded by the Military Future military robots may come in softer, more cuddly, and stranger forms.
The US Army Reserach Laboratory is working on a new kind of versatile robot that moves around with biological muscles instead of wheels and motors.
South Korea's Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) is actively pursuing the development of "biomimetic" robot systems designed to mirror the natural movements of animals and ...
Military robots have always been pretty dumb. The PackBot the US Army uses for inspections and bomb disposal, for example, has practically no onboard intelligence and is piloted by remote control.
Military Robots Market Growth: The Military Robots market is expected to reach US$ 30.26 billion by 2031 from US$ 18.10 billion in 2024; it is expected to record a CAGR of 7.9% during the forecast ...
A new report from the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) looks at the future of military's unmanned systems over the next 25 years. This 188-page report covers air-, land- and sea-based unmanned ...
Depending on the situation, the robot would then decide if deeper moral reasoning is required -- for example, should the robot help the wounded soldier, or should it continue with its primary ...
The U.S. military’s future robots may reshape themselves like Transformers – those popular shape-shifting robots from Hollywood movies and toys. But DARPA doesn’t want Optimus Prime as ...
A group of experts wants to study the brain waves and eye movements of people playing a video game in order to build an advanced AI that could coordinate the actions of military robots. The US ...
The U.S. Army is exploring equipping its future army robots with organic muscle tissue, which is inherently superior to mechanical locomotion systems.