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Apr 4, 2024

Amazon-backed humanoid firm Agility Robotics laid off a ‘small number’ of staff

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Workers affected by the job cuts “were not central to core product development and commercialization,” an Agility Robotics spokesperson said.

Apr 4, 2024

Ways Automation Can (And Will) Impact The Manufacturing Industry

Posted by in categories: materials, robotics/AI

Many of us have seen photos of and read stories about robots working on the production floor in factories, speeding up old-school assembly lines to build products more quickly. And while the robotics trend in manufacturing is continuing to grow, that’s not the only way technology (including artificial intelligence) and automation are impacting the industry.

From enhancing worker safety to more efficiently moving goods and materials from point A to point B, automation is making its mark on the manufacturing industry, and tech experts expect even more changes and improvements in the near future. Below, 17 members of Forbes Technology Council discuss specific manufacturing tasks that are (or soon will be) handled more efficiently, safely and productively by technology and automation.

Apr 4, 2024

Diabetes drug slows development of Parkinson’s disease

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The drug, which is in the same family as blockbuster weight-loss drugs such as Wegovy, slowed development of symptoms by a small but statistically significant amount.

Apr 4, 2024

Large-scale, lab-grown meat: Step inside a cultivated meat factory | Hard Reset

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

Have your buffalo wings, save the chicken. Step inside a lab-grown meat factory with us to see the future of food.

Up next, Meet Apollo, the real-life robot who wants to give you more free time | Hard Reset ► • Meet Apollo, the real-life robot who…

Continue reading “Large-scale, lab-grown meat: Step inside a cultivated meat factory | Hard Reset” »

Apr 4, 2024

CATL launches new EV battery with close to a 1 million mile, 15-year lifespan

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transportation

Leading EV battery maker CATL released its new breakthrough battery pack with up to a nearly 1 million mile (1.5 million km), 15-year warranty.

CATL launched the battery pack with Yutung Bus Co to power commercial vehicles like buses and different classes of trucks.

Yutong, one of China’s largest bus makers, said the new battery packs will be used in upcoming electric vehicles. According to the company, the new long-lasting EV battery has zero degradation through the first 1,000 cycles.

Apr 4, 2024

Securing Minerals for the Energy Transition

Posted by in category: computing

From twenty old computer motherboards, it recovered a 450-milligram nugget.

Learn more about the role of critical minerals in the World Economic Forum’s report:

Mint ETH Zürich

Continue reading “Securing Minerals for the Energy Transition” »

Apr 4, 2024

NASA picks 3 teams to design the next generation of moon buggy

Posted by in category: space

NASA has given three space companies the chance to design the next-generation moon buggy — but only one design will go to space. Intuitive Machines, Lunar Outpost, and Venturi Astrolab are developing rugged vehicles intended for astronauts to drive around on the lunar surface, from which NASA may choose as early as next year.

The three teams will now enter into a 12-month “feasibility phase” that will culminate in a preliminary design review. At that point, there will be a subsequent competitive request for proposals, where the trio of companies will compete for a demonstration task order, NASA officials explained during a press conference on Wednesday.

At that point, a final awardee will be selected. The chosen company will be responsible not only for designing the lunar terrain vehicle (LTV) but also for launching and landing it on the moon prior to the Artemis V mission, which is currently slated for no earlier than 2029.

Apr 4, 2024

Video: Supersonic drone flies with revolutionary detonation engine

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, drones, military, nuclear weapons, robotics/AI, space travel

A supersonic drone that will be propelled by a revolutionary new engine has taken to the skies for the first time. When Venus Aerospace’s aircraft does go supersonic on a later date, it will be powered by a Rotating Detonation Rocket Engine (RDRE).

Supersonic drones may sound like something bleeding edge, but they’re surprisingly old hat as a basic concept. As far back as the early 1950s, the US Air Force was fielding remote-controlled supersonic jets for targets to test air defenses, as platforms for reconnaissance in dangerous areas, or as weapons armed with conventional or nuclear warheads.

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Apr 4, 2024

Consortium of companies design oceanic energy-creation technology that can bring power to remote islands: ‘The perfect opportunity’

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, sustainability

In an effort to bring clean, renewable energy to some of the world’s more remote islands — many of which are powered by old diesel generators — a pan-European consortium of seven companies has designed a device capable of turning seawater into electricity.

The Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion, or OTEC, technology consists of three main parts that are being built all over the world: a cold-water riser pipe, which is being fabricated in Austria, a cylindrical hull, which is being built in the Canary Islands (a Spanish autonomous community, where the OTEC will be assembled and tested), and a gimbal connection point.

Continue reading “Consortium of companies design oceanic energy-creation technology that can bring power to remote islands: ‘The perfect opportunity’” »

Apr 4, 2024

NASA selects three companies to advance Artemis lunar rover designs

Posted by in category: space travel

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — NASA has selected three companies to work on lunar rover concepts that would be offered as a service for Artemis lunar landings and scientific activities.

NASA announced April 3 it picked teams led by Intuitive Machines, Lunar Outpost and Venturi Astrolab for its Lunar Terrain Vehicle (LTV) Services contract. The contract covers work to design and develop rovers that would be used by astronauts on Artemis missions starting with Artemis 5 at the end of the decade. The rovers would be provided by the companies to NASA as a service, in much the same way the agency is procuring spacesuits and lunar landers.

While the primary purpose of the LTV will be to transport astronauts across the lunar surface, NASA expects to also teleoperate the rover, allowing it to perform scientific investigations when astronauts are not present. “Think of a hybrid of the Apollo-style lunar rover that was driven by our astronauts and an uncrewed mobile science platform,” said Vanessa Wyche, director of NASA’s Johnson Space Center, at a briefing to announce the contract selections.

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