Soft robots made out of flexible, biocompatible materials are in high demand in industries from health care to manufacturing, ...
You know what’s cooler than printing robot parts on a 3D printer? Printing the whole freaking robot. Scientists at Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Researchers managed to 3D-print a robot hand that mimics bones, ligaments, and tendons 3D printing has advanced so rapidly that ...
Harvard engineers have developed a new 3D printing technique that allows soft robots to ...
The method, described in Advanced Materials, replaces the slow, multi-step molding and casting process that traditionally defines soft robotics. Researchers have figured out how to 3D-print ...
Though the sky has always been the limit regarding the innovation and advancement of 3D printing, a group of researchers at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab may have pushed that ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. University of California, Berkeley, has unveiled a new open-source, budget-friendly and customizable humanoid robot called ...
It might soon be relatively trivial to make soft robots — at least, if you have a 3D printer handy. UC San Diego researchers have devised a way to 3D-print insect-like flexible robots cheaply, quickly ...
Robots have a tremendous potential, but if a way can't be found to manufacture them quickly, cheaply, and in large numbers, that potential may remain exactly that. To that end, MIT's Computer Science ...
Lilly 3D-printed her own soulmate - a robot named InMoovator. At 19, she realized she felt different: she wasn't attracted to humans, but to robots. So instead of forcing herself to fit in, she ...
Internals of 3D printed “print and fold” robot. [Image source: MIT CSAIL] Robot design traditionally separates the body geometry from the mechanics of the gait, but they both have a profound effect ...
Applications for 3D printing/additive manufacturing has grown by leaps and bounds over the past decade—particularly for its use to produce production- and assembly-ready parts, not just prototypes.