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Results 1021 - 1030 of 1113 for Robotic Arms
  • News - 5 Oct 2012
    NASA's Curiosity rover is in a position on Mars where scientists and engineers can begin preparing the rover to take its first scoop of soil for analysis. Curiosity is the centerpiece of the...
  • News - 25 Jul 2012
    RMT Robotics commemorates seven years of ADAM’s proven efficiency within the industry as a tire handling solution. ADAM has imparted the highest efficiency in green tire (GT) transport, since...
  • News - 16 Jul 2012
    A newly-developed cost-effective device enables individuals affected with spinal cord injuries, Parkinson’s, amputees, multiple Sclerosis, or muscular dystrophy to interact with their computers...
  • News - 10 Jul 2012
    Almost anything that can be made with paper, paint and cardboard can be animated with an educational robotics kit developed at Carnegie Mellon University’s Robotics Institute. No technical...
  • News - 21 Jan 2012
    TECNALIA has developed a new, advanced system that eases neuromuscular disability in stroke patients from the comfort of their homes. With the help of a portable robotic system plus a software...
  • News - 2 May 2011
    The flight data recorder of Air France 447 which crashed nearly two years ago has been found by robots that are combing the sea floor of the Atlantic ocean. The cylindrical Honeywell ruggedized flight...
  • News - 30 Mar 2011
    There’s a lot of speculation as to why Japan is not using robots to fix the damaged nuclear reactors at Fukushima Dai 1 facility, despite being at the helm of the robotics industry. According...
  • News - 9 Feb 2011
    America’s swelling ranks of groundbot warriors are being used in new, unexpected, life-saving ways. According to Lt. Col. Dave Thompson, the Marine Corps’ top robot-handler, there are more...
  • News - 24 Nov 2010
    A Battlefield Extraction-Assist Robot, or BEAR, has been tested over the past year by soldiers at the U.S. Army Infantry Centre Manoeuvre Battle Lab at Fort Benning. BEAR may soon have the ability to...
  • News - 21 Jan 2026
    A team at Keio University has developed a way for robots to adjust their grip based on what they’re holding - soft, hard, heavy, delicate - without needing endless hours of training data....

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