Creating custom outfits in "Roblox" has become one of the most popular ways for young creators to express themselves and even earn Robux. Whether you enjoy fashion, want to design your own style, or ...
Meet Sparrow, Cardinal and Proteus. They’re the robots that, step by step, are replacing human workers in the company’s warehouses. By Karen Weise Karen Weise reported from Shreveport, La., and has ...
The Roborock Saros Z70 is a unique robot vacuum and mop with an interesting feature — a mechanical arm! Originally sold for $2,600, it’s on sale for the first time from Amazon with a 46% discount that ...
With a gimbal-mounted camera and some AI smarts, you could potentially have your phone compose better shots for you, take better selfies, and follow your face while you're on a video call. I just ...
On October 15, Honor announced its next flagship, the Magic 8 series, at a launch event in China. Alongside the new Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5-powered devices, the company also teased a concept phone ...
The man is seeking damages of $51 million after the alleged incident Sean Gallup/Getty A man is suing Tesla and a related robotics manufacturing company for $51 million Peter Hinterdobler said he was ...
At CES 2025, Roborock announced one of the most unique robot vacuum cleaners, the Saros Z70, which features a retractable arm. It looks like any other robot vacuum cleaner at first glance but has a ...
A robot vacuum with an arm that picks up socks costs thousands now, but Roborock is working on a mass-market version that will cost "just hundreds," its president promises. Ajay has worked in tech ...
What if building a robotic arm didn’t require a massive budget or a team of engineers? Imagine a device capable of delivering smooth, precise movements for studio applications, constructed for less ...
In a world first, a robotic arm has been retrofitted and operated inside an active nuclear glovebox at Sellafield in the UK, helping to remove the risk to operators and promising to make decades-old ...
Certified kitchen knife nerd Scott Heimendinger used a robot arm on multiple chef’s knives to collect 100,000 data points about which blades cut most efficiently. He’s ranked them from best to worst.