Robots will likely be a part of our everyday life sooner or later, and one scientist is trying to change how empathetic they are in a surprising way.
Anunderwater robot has uncovered a long-lost wreckage of a Second World War bomber on the seabed near Malta. The remains, identified as a Fairey Swordfish, were found during an autonomous exploration ...
Patients needing spine surgery at Augusta Health now have access to advanced robotic technology that enhances accuracy and ...
NEW YORK -- As the new robot called Sprout walks around a Manhattan office, nodding its rectangular head, lifting its windshield wiper-like “eyebrows” and offering to shake your hand with its grippers ...
While the robot has taken a job previously done by a human, nobody at Sterling Heights Assembly Plant is facing a layoff, ...
Over the past few years, rapid surgical robotics advancements in navigation, imaging, and workflow integration have transformed what’s possible in the operating room. As we look ahead to 2026, I ...
The Cumbrian plant has completed its first trial of a swabbing tool, designed to be used by Spot, a four-legged robot, to ...
Current robots are severely limited in their intelligence by the constraints inherent in rigid electronic hardware frameworks ...
China’s humanoid robotics race took a striking turn in late January when DroidUp unveiled Moya, a humanoid it calls the world ...
ETM said its TFM technology enables OEMs to simplify mechanical designs, reduce costs, and achieve performance benchmarks.
Firms are working to make the motors that drive robots more efficient and cheaper.
Robots that can actually do things are not slick yet, and it's a relief when robotics companies don't hide from that.