A soft armband that lets you steer a robot while you sprint on a treadmill or bob on rough seas sounds like science fiction. Engineers at the University of California San Diego have now built ...
Traditionally, robot arms have been controlled either by joysticks, buttons, or very carefully programmed routines. However, for [Narongporn Laosrisin’s] homebrew build, they decided to go with ...
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Engineers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology here have developed a wearable device that can control robotic ...
Their next-generation wearable, detailed in Nature Sensors, uses stretchable electronics and AI to read gestures in real time, even during intense shaking, bouncing, or swaying. Killers without a ...
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