Tech Xplore on MSN
A stapler that knows when you need it: Using AI to turn everyday objects into proactive assistants
A stapler slides across a desk to meet a waiting hand, or a knife edges out of the way just before someone leans against a countertop. It sounds like magic, but in Carnegie Mellon University's ...
IFLScience on MSN
Brain Implant Enables Paralyzed Man To Feel And Use Objects Using Someone Else’s Hands
The tech allowed Keith Thomas to control the hands of other people, including another with a spinal cord injury.
A Captain Jack Sparrow impersonator crashed and objected to 'Pirates of the Caribbean' superfan Jenni Foster's wedding in ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
Some Dogs Are So Ball-Obsessed, It Could Mirror Human Addiction
Some of our canine pets are colloquially called "ball junkies" because they have an addictive-like attitude toward their toys ...
Amazon S3 on MSN
The fastest human-made object ever recorded by science
A look at the fastest man-made object ever recorded.
Tech Xplore on MSN
AI systems and humans 'see' the world differently—and that's why AI images look so garish
Humans see when light waves enter our eyes through the iris, cornea and lens. Light is converted into electrical signals by a ...
Bearded vultures have been extinct in southern Spain for 70 to 130 years, depending on the specific region. But while the ...
Keith Thomas, a man in his 40s with no sensation or movement in his hands, is able to feel and move objects by controlling ...
CMU researchers are harnessing AI to help everyday objects sense human activity and respond in useful ways. Their system uses ...
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In 2021, when squiggles and wiggles took over the home design landscape, glassware was no exception: Zigzagging stems and ...
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