News

Engineers developed a ping-pong-playing robot that quickly estimates the speed and trajectory of an incoming ball and precisely hits it to a desired location on the table.
In addition to training future players, the technology could expand the capabilities of other humanoid robots, such as for search and rescue.
MIT engineers have developed a lightweight, high-speed robotic arm capable of returning ping pong shots with impressive precision and speed.
Baseball fans were stunned this week as umpire Nic Lentz called a perfect game behind the plate—begging the question: Is it ...
Day two (9 May) brought the energy to its peak with hands-on events like the Soccer Bot challenge, Line Following Robot competition, and the much-anticipated Techathon — an on-site, hardware-software ...
A Florida Tech professor and human factors expert is working with NASA to design the next generation control room for the ...
The work of the robotics lab includes using robot ‘swarms,’ working together autonomously. And there’s also a RaccoonBot.
AI is helping advance robotics in a suprising way. But one tiny screw could be holding the U.S. back from leading the Botcom ...
Sunseeker has entered into an exclusive partnership with Bundesliga club SV Werder Bremen. The collaboration coincides with ...
University of North Carolina football coach Bill Belichick and CBS released statements after clashing during an interview.
Cheng and his team shot videos of the robots in action, capturing their dynamic behavior as they crawl and roll into a ball to move along ... Cheng said he also envisions future applications ...