AI-powered wearable cleans noisy motion signals to let users control machines with simple gestures in real-world conditions.
Engineers at the University of California San Diego have developed a next-generation wearable system that enables people to control machines using everyday gestures — even while running, riding in a ...
Walk through almost any small or mid-sized machine shop in the United States today and a new scene is emerging. Amid the familiar soundtrack of mills and grinders, a robotic arm might be tending a ...
China leads in low-cost rotary actuators, but trails Western suppliers in C3-grade roller screws needed for heavy-load, ...
CEO He Xiaopeng said Chinese EV startup Xpeng wanted its Iron humanoid robot to be "highly human-like." ...
For example, researchers at the Harvard University School of Engineering and Applied Science and Mass General Brigham have ...
Multi-modal sensors generate data that edge AI can turn into actionable insights, provided new devices can be integrated with ...