Markus Nemitz and his team at Tufts University have developed soft-jointed robots using 3D printing, realizing a long-term research goal.
L3Harris announced a new platform it is developing that will allow for large swarms of unmanned systems across multiple domains to operate together seamlessly.
17h
Interesting Engineering on MSNNew tech lets US military control thousands of drones together at fingertipsL3Harris Technologies has unveiled a new software solution known as AMORPHOUS, designed to manage thousands of drones through ...
Imagine a swarm of tiny robots, each about the size of the palm of your hand, spreading out over a wildfire-ravaged community ...
To date, the company has demonstrated the ability to connect multiple systems, but it envisions Amorphous eventually managing ...
Toby Magsig, L3Harris’s vice president and general manager for enterprise autonomous solutions, said the approach used in ...
21h
Hosted on MSN‘Cerberus’: Russia’s drone swarm truck to steer 12 fiber-linked UAVs in future warsIn the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine there have been multiple advancements in drone warfare. More innovations are around the corner, and one of them is a drone swarm-managing system that ...
MIT scientists are designing robotic insects that could one day swarm out of mechanical hives and perform pollination at a rapid pace — ensuring fruits and vegetables are grown at an unprecedented ...
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