Boston Dynamics upgraded the Atlas robot
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One of the first quests you’ll find in the Remnant 2 DLC is the quest to repair a broken robot that needs your help. You need to find a repair station and the remaining parts scattered throughout the giant map of N’Erud. We’ll go over how to find the ...
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Hyundai paints a robotic future at CES 2026 — yet a reassuring one
Five four-legged robot dogs danced to K-pop, performing dazzling backflips. A humanoid robot, walking almost indistinguishably from a human, appeared next, twisting its body in a bow of greeting.
In a new video caught by TechCrunch, Boston Dynamics’ humanoid robot Atlas can be seen working autonomously in a demo space, sorting engine parts between numbered bins. The company claims that Atlas doesn’t need to be controlled by humans to do work.
In a move that inches us just a little closer to the singularity, engineers have developed robots that can grow, self-repair, and morph by absorbing parts from other robots. They can also help their brethren do the same. At the moment, the robots in ...
Robots that move, sense and even coordinate with one another usually bring to mind tangled wires, circuit boards and humming motors. In a new study from the University of Oxford, all of that disappears.
Researchers have created microscopic robots so small they’re barely visible, yet smart enough to sense, decide, and move completely on their own. Powered by light and equipped with tiny computers, the robots swim by manipulating electric fields rather than using moving parts.
On a metallic door in San Francisco’s Mission District, a single character—“π”—offers a cryptic clue as to the virtuous circle of labor taking place beyond. The door opens to reveal furious activity involving both humans and machines. A woman ...
Gundam Breaker 4 is the perfect case of robotic deja vu all over again. Think of it as a greatest hits compilation of the Gundam franchise’s iconic mechs all placed inside a colony-sized hamster wheel that’s constantly kept spinning by robot collection ...
If you’re going to kill animals for food, don’t waste their parts – that’s just rude. Use everything, snout-to-tail, and not just bones for glue or stomachs for drink-bags, either. Get creative! And why not? Crustacean shells are strong and ...