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When the bot goes underwater, compartments within the body take in water, allowing this robo-bee it to sink. The robot can then turn water into hydrogen and oxygen, which it uses to propel itself ...
Don’t be alarmed. They are just 5-inch-tall “Bee-Bots,” simple robots that the kids can program to go forward, backward and turn. “For a good technology future, you need to bring […] ...
This Week In Bots: Bee Serious! Introducing A Robot That's Smarter Than A Buzzing Insect - Fast Company advertisement 10-05-2012 TECH ...
Bee-Bots use a six-inch grid system called a map to move. Students placed five photos on the 12-square grid and navigated the robot through the story about the lumberjack known for his strength ...
Scout bees vote for new hive locations with a 'dance.' These tiny bee-inspired bots make a team decision by blinking at one another.
Harvard University's been working on this awesome robot bee since at least 2012. The current incarnation of RoboBee still needs to be wired to an external power source and it can't control itself ...
An insect-like robot can fly untethered—for about half a second—by flapping its four wings to generate lift, researchers reported in Nature on June 26. The device, called Robobee, is less than 5 cm ...
model. The Harvard Monolithic Bee (or Mobee), for example, turns from a flat shape into a 2.4-millimetre-tall robot in just one movement – just like a pop-up book.