A Chinese robotics company put its automated production line for robot joints into operation on Sunday, marking a key leap ...
Opinion
Fast Lane Only on MSNOpinion
The first robot only car plant is almost here and it is terrifyingly real
The fully robotic car plant that once sounded like science fiction is now a concrete industrial goal, with analysts expecting the first facility where machines build entire vehicles with no human on ...
CATL has become the first battery manufacturer to deploy humanoid robots at scale on the assembly line, replacing humans in ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
XPeng rolls out first auto-grade humanoid robot, eyes mass production this year
XPeng has completed the first unit of its ET1 humanoid robot prototype, marking progress ...
Located in the Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park, the automated production line has an initially designed annual capacity of 100,000 humanoid robot joints, with plans to upgrade to 150,000 units in the future.
Cue the self-replicating robot revolution: Apptronik's humanoid Apollo robot is gearing up to assist in manufacturing copies of itself. That's thanks to a deal between the Texas-based robotics company ...
A robotics technician at Tesla’s troubled Fremont, California, manufacturing plant is suing the Elon Musk-owned automaker for $51 million after he says an out-of-control robot suddenly struck him ...
To achieve the objectives of this line-following robot, a firmware was written for it and makes use of C for the PIC microcontroller programming. The programs were made to be loaded using only a USB ...
The robot utilizes Futaba S-148 servo motors to build a differential drive system that will be used to design the line following robot. The servo motors were mounted to the bottom of the plexiglass ...
Some readers may recall building a line-following robot during their school days. Involving some IR LEDs, perhaps a bit of LEGO, and plenty of trial-and-error, it was fun on a tiny scale. Now imagine ...
If you ever built a line following robot, you’ll be nostalgic about [Jeremy’s] light-seeking robot. It is a very simple build ...
Following in the footsteps of the U.S. Open and the Australian Open, Wimbledon finally did away with human line judges in favor of Hawk-Eye technology at this year’s Championships. All 18 courts have ...
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