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- Robots: Facts about these programmable and autonomous machines | Live . . .
Robots include a wide variety of machines, such as the giant arms used to make cars, automatic vacuum cleaners, humanoid machines that look like people and do backflips, and robotic dogs
- Robotics | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology
MIT researchers “speak objects into existence” using AI and robotics The speech-to-reality system combines 3D generative AI and robotic assembly to create objects on demand December 5, 2025 Read full story
- Artificial tendons give muscle-powered robots a boost
MIT engineers developed artificial tendons that could connect robotic skeletons and biological muscle tissue Made from tough and flexible hydrogel, the tendons could be used in various bio-hybrid robots
- Robotics news, features and articles - Live Science
Discover how robots can help push the realms of science and engineering with the latest robotics news, features and articles
- MIT researchers “speak objects into existence” using AI and robotics
MIT researchers at the School of Architecture and Planning developed a speech-to-reality system that combines generative AI, natural language processing, and robotic assembly to fabricate physical objects from spoken prompts
- Robots that spare warehouse workers the heavy lifting
The company’s robotic arm is made by the German industrial robotics giant KUKA The robots are mounted on a custom mobile base with an onboard computing systems so they can navigate to docks and adjust their positions inside trailers autonomously while lifting
- A new model offers robots precise pick-and-place solutions
Pick-and-place machines are a type of automated equipment used to place objects into structured, organized locations These machines are used for a variety of applications — from electronics assembly to packaging, bin picking, and even inspection — but many current pick-and-place solutions are limited Current solutions lack “precise generalization,” or the ability to solve many tasks
- This fast and agile robotic insect could someday aid in mechanical . . .
New insect-scale microrobots can fly more than 100 times longer than previous versions The new bots, also significantly faster and more agile, could someday be used to pollinate fruits and vegetables
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