Elon Musk’s brain implant company is launching a new study to test whether its wireless device can control a robotic arm.
See the making of a functional robotic arm at home using just cardboard! This unique DIY craft combines creativity and basic ...
Elon Musk’s Neuralink has said it’s about to begin testing a technology that could enable someone with paralysis to control a ...
Elon Musk’s brain-computer interface company, Neuralink Corp., said it is starting to test a technology that could allow ...
Elon Musk's Neuralink received approval to launch a new feasibility trial using its brain implant and an investigational ...
Watch China's robotic arm scan the exterior of the Tiangong space station in these views. Credit: Space.com | footage ...
At first glance, ZRob looks like a simple robot, small enough to sit on a table, holding a drumstick and beating a drum. But ...
They are launching version 3 of their LittleArm robotic arm, and the progression from version ... The gripper tips also feature a simple “cutout” that allow it more easily grasp horizontal ...
Neuralink plans to enroll participants from its ongoing PRIME trial into this feasibility study, as mentioned in a post on ...
The robotic arm is then wired to send and receive signals ... The end goal, says Gaunt, is a simple one: to develop technologies so that paralysis and limb loss are “not a disability.” ...
These 15 ton robotic arms can reach 16 meters. Not content to control them by a simple joystick, the team hacked together WiiMote controls for them. Ok, we get it. Everybody loves the Wii.