Why would you want a robot to see inside a sealed box? Digging deeper beyond the initial creepy thought, a new breakthrough from MIT could soon let warehouse robots do something pretty remarkable.
It looks almost like any other shopping cart, except sensors allow it to follow the shopper around the supermarket and slow down when needed so items can be placed in it, and it never crashes into ...
Terminators have night and infrared vision. But they had to start somewhere, right? In 1979, a robot at Stanford called Cart that was radio-linked to a mainframe tracked and navigated 3D obstacles ...
(Circa) — When you hear "self-driving shopping cart," your response might be: "How lazy can we get?" But the new DASH autonomous shopping cart does more than push itself; it's a full-fledged retail ...
LG unveiled an impression with a range of robots at last year's CES, and it's poised for a repeat performance at next week's show. Following the trial runs of its Airport Guide Robot and the Airport ...
ROEQ, the leader in mobile robotic equipment, is launching a top module and carts boosting the payload of the MiR250 robot from 250kg to 500kg VISSENBJERG, Denmark--(BUSINESS WIRE)--‘Doing more with ...
This device attaches to a standard hospital supply cart and can pull up to 500 pounds. “If a nurse is in a patient room and needs something, she can call this robot with her handheld device and she ...
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Video: Warehouse humanoid robots lift and sort objects on their own in real-time
In the video published on Monday, each robot picks objects from piles of different heights, forcing the system to rely on live perception and motion planning. The robots do not follow fixed paths.
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