A man with ALS has gone viral for using a robotic arm controlled by his brain to feed himself, and the Neuralink waitlist is ...
Neuralink patient Nick Wray demonstrates how the brain chip lets him control a robot arm to take a drink from a cup.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Mind over machine: Neuralink’s breakthrough lets patient control robot with thoughts
The breakthrough is part of Neuralink’s Food and Drug Administration (FDA) – approved “CONVOY” study, which tests how implanted brain chips enable patients to perform daily tasks independently. Wray ...
The Pirkus is a fine-looking robot kit that can, once assembled, be controlled via a Bluetooth-enabled phone. The kit isn’t cheap—it’s quoted at 1,000 quid—but it’s no slump when it comes to abilities ...
The phrase 'humanoid robots as attack vectors' just sent a chill up my spine. Though a fix for this specific exploit is ...
UniPwn flaw in Unitree robots allows root access, covert telemetry, and wormable exploits, raising global concerns over robot cybersecurity.
The project is designed to control a robotic vehicle using an android application. Bluetooth device is interfaced to the control unit on the robot for sensing the signals transmitted by the android ...
This roller skating robot from Japan may not drink and spew catchphrases like “Bite My Shiny Metal Ass”, but unlike Bender, you can control this one with your Bluetooth-enabled cellphone. Plen has 18 ...
A project known as RoboPAIR demonstrated that carefully crafted prompts can coerce robot controllers, including the Unitree ...
Wi-Fi configuration interface of several Unitree robots could allow attackers to gain root-level control, researchers ...
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