If you buy through a BGR link, we may earn an affiliate commission, helping support our expert product labs. We’ve all seen the movies: robots that look and behave like humans are among us, and chaos ...
In the rapidly advancing arena of robotics, a groundbreaking development is making waves. The introduction of self-healing muscle technology is redefining the paradigm of robotic efficiency and ...
Robots of the future could be wrapped in lifelike skin that can repair itself, in a similar way to the way human skin heals, thanks to a novel approach involving cultured skin cells. The skin will ...
Tesla Inc. CEO Elon Musk on Sunday dismissed an innovation from Japan to bind engineered skin to humanoid robots allowing for it to self-heal like the cyborg in the 1984 sci-fi movie The Terminator.
The idea of creating self-repairing machines has been a popular fantasy (and nightmare) ever since the Terminator franchise mythologized the concept in the 1980s. Innovators are still a long ways away ...
Japanese scientists have found a way to bind engineered skin tissue to humanoid robots. They say the breakthrough brings with it potential benefits to robotic platforms including increased mobility as ...
This friend’s biggest advantage is that it can work ‘007 (0:00 to 0:00, seven days a week),’” said Lao, a public relations ...
Eric Markvicka (left), Robert F. and Myrna L. Krohn Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering, along with graduate students Ethan Krings (right) and Patrick McManigal (not pictured), recently ...
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Scientists from Taiwan have developed a new material that can stretch up to 4,600% of its original length before breaking. Even if it does break, gently pressing the pieces together at room ...