Humans have a long way to go to build robots.
But no matter how useful our automatic machines are or how stylish and efficient our killing machines are, we all know that we are always the second best.
Nature has been building highend meat-
After all, robots have been around for millions of years.
Well, we're tired of second place.
They say that imitation is the most sincere compliment, so it is a compliment that Nature considers these strange and terrible disgusting things. . .
Sprint speed robots are faster than anyone alive.
209 and Claptrap tell us that one thing to stop the bloody robot uprising is a solid set of stairs.
Agility has always been a problem for machines.
We may not be able to hide, but at least we can run.
No longer!
South Korean scientists have designed a robot that can reach 28 miles an hour.
Because you are naughty this year, they imitate the son of a velociraptor.
They haven't packed it with a balance yet (
Or feathers, depending on how funny they want and/or biological accuracy)
But they have identified the framework for rap.
Legs are made of race. car-
Carbon fiber, and the ground reaction force must be dissipated.
The big tail swings around to balance, and even if scientists try to knock the Raptor down by setting up obstacles, the Raptor can continue Trucking (
Will be your child soon)in its path.
What is impressive is that it has been timed at 27.
44 miles an hour.
We don't know who funded the project to build a robot, velociraptor, which can run the fastest people on earth, but we assume that he has at least a master's degree in "the end of the day", if not a PhD.
Crabster CR200 is a huge walking crab game
Sci-fi movies are full of all sorts of magical machines and vehicles that look bad on the screen, but are completely impractical in real life.
The reason you're not driving to work every day in a huge clumsy crab tank is because at some point humans realize that wheels are much easier and we're obviously a settled species.
Or at least we are.
Meet the crab catcher: use 6-
Crabster travels safely across the sea at an amazing speed of 1 mile per hour, weighing 1,400 pounds and passing through 500-meter tether.
This cable is used to pass information back to headquarters and to ensure that ksulu is not involved 12-
Discount at your fingertips.
The ship responded well to the initial Underwater Test and has now had its first formal archaeological restoration mission in the Yellow Sea, which was already demonstrated by previous vessels in the Yellow Sea. . . unworthy.
Designed by Korean scientists, Crabster addresses some of the major challenges facing traditional ocean exploration, such as how divers are dominated by rough waters.
Do you know that there is nothing wrong with the tides, the raging waters, or the intervention that the water people hate?
Giant Web punk crab
Flying Bat drones combine all your fears about robots and bats who are willing to wait for reality to catch up with the novel, and engineers at the University of Michigan have started working on Batman's equipment.
Call yourself the target Advanced Technology Center for micro-electronics and BionicBAT for short.
They have a pun-
A strange robot.
They are qualified for a tragic scar chemical explosion away from the evil alliance. The six-
The Army's $10 million developed inch drone will be equipped with a range of sensors that allow "bats" to capture sight, sound and smell, as well as analyze poison and radiation in the air.
More ambitious is the development of a special lithium battery (
We assume they're in the air.
Reference the "bat" section in the demo)
This can charge itself by "removing" solar, wind and kinetic energy.
Just like a real bat, the manual version will be able to direct itself using an Echo positioning that makes it equally proficient at night or with limited visibility.
Finally, you can stop worrying about the silly phobia of real bats and start worrying about energy --draining robo-
Future bats.
A robot kangaroo was built at the Hopping o lab, which is based in Germany.
Because if you're going to give robot life to anything in Australia, it's almost the only safe option on the table.
It seems kangaroo, rabbit and ile E.
When he put the spring on his feet, the Coyotes have it right ---
Jumping is more effective than walking, crawling, taxiing and bumpy riding from roommates with a car.
You know what the Germans think about efficiency.
Kangaroos especially stir up the appetite of scientists because the great tendons on their legs use a lot of elastic energy to enable them.
This allows kangaroos to consume long distances with relatively little energy and heat.
Mom, who is stupid to go to school now in Moon shoes?
Festo uses a combination of pneumatic and electrical components to power kangaroos, creating a robot capable of fluid movement, even though it does not jump high enough to get out of the incredible Valley.
Kangaroos are also light enough to travel long distances with very little energy, so if we can integrate this jump technology into car design, we will have super
Efficient vehicles and possibly some very dangerous highways.
The butterfly drone will. . . Flutter . . . Menacingly . . . At You?
Israel has one of the world's most elite troops.
Of course, their robots must reach or exceed all federal governments.
The standard of terror enforced, right?
This is their latest technology: by the Israeli aviation industry (IAI)
The butterfly drone comes with a camera and memory card.
15 grams, the weight is about the same as the average weight.
The drone, they say, is smaller than some actual butterfly, though it looks like the whole face of that guy, which begs the question: what kind of terrible butterfly is there in Israel flying around?
The size of the drone is relatively small, whether in enemy bases, buildings, tunnels, or caves of terrorism.
You know those horrible caves.
Butterflies everywhere.
Also, it is very portable and can be stored in your pocket until ready for deployment.
Or before the battle, it may fall gently on the tip of the soldier's nose.
Whichever is most appropriate.
A small problem: in a test flight, the butterfly drone successfully attracted a group of birds, which unfortunately are now the main natural predators under Israeli surveillance.
Flying jellyfish that are hard to explain and budget set the scene for us.
You are a typical scientist. -
Your science.
The brain makes you feel alienated from humans, you want to seek revenge, and the best way you think is to make flying robots.
Where is your inspiration from?
Butterfly? Too weenie. Bats?
It's a bit disturbing, but it's done. How about . . . jellyfish?
New York mathematicians Leif Ristroph and Stephen Childress believe that yes, a flying jellyfish is enough to satisfy their overall discontent with humans, so they: actually, what ristroph and Childress want to do is to make the simplest flight machine, which means canceling things like sensors, batteries, etc. , propellers and other unrelated parts.
The motor that drives the flap is the size of the pea and that's all it has.
Otherwise, robots are technically bare.
Such a simple design means low cost, and Ristroph believes the commercial version of the robot can be retail for 50 cents.
Spend 50 bucks flooding a room with a crazy flying jellyfish robot? .
We will explain more deeply how this thing works, but the creators acknowledge themselves.
Science is busy thinking about whether it exists, not only does it not ask it, but it doesn't even ask how it did it at first.