Tech Xplore on MSN
Artificial tendons give muscle-powered robots a boost
Our muscles are nature's actuators. The sinewy tissue is what generates the forces that make our bodies move. In recent years, engineers have used real muscle tissue to actuate "biohybrid robots" made ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
How China’s hyper-realistic humanoid robot achieved its eerily human walk
Rather than pushing a futuristic, machine-forward aesthetic, XPENG leans into recognisable visual cues such as body shape, ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Real-muscle robots gain threefold speed and 30× force with new tendon system
But MIT’s new muscle-tendon system changes that equation by bridging muscle to skeleton more efficiently. And the numbers ...
A spherical sea sponge discovered in Antarctica, Carnivorous cladorhizid, is a carnivore, trapping and devouring live animals ...
Bask in the sun… and risk getting the meanest sunburn of your life. Hello Sunshine is an impressive step up from the usual ...
Artificial tendons make muscle-powered robots stronger and faster. They can last longer and work in tricky or dangerous places.
The identification of the remains was based on a contemporary osteological analysis, but they were subsequently lost and only ...
Many superheroes were born thanks to tragedies in their lives, but these seven heroes had the most tragic backstories.
Black Ops 7 Zombies finally flings players into the Dark Aether, the story’s namesake, for a full map. No longer are we ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Liquid metal with new tricks could reshape future gadgets
Liquid metals that flow like water yet conduct electricity like solid wires are moving from lab curiosities into the toolkit ...
Scientists have been working for years to create robots powered by living muscle tissue. These biohybrid robots combine ...
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