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Dozens of robots descended on Boston this weekend, providing a chance for children and adults to get a glimpse of the future.
The Robot Block Party at Stanford University celebrates all things robotics -- from startups pitching their businesses to home-brew builders looking to have some fun.
MOSS blocks require no programming, and kids can create objects that roll around automatically. A robot with a red block positioned at the front speeds up or slows down depending on whether or not ...
Imagine 3-D printing, without a 3-D printer. MIT’s robotic M-Blocks could change the landscape of design forever. Here’s how. The M-Blocks, created by John Romanishin at MIT Computer Science and ...
BOSTON - We know that Boston is a major hub for robotics on the world stage and that will be on full display this weekend in the Seaport at the fifth-annual Robot Block Party. More than 40 companies ...
Just in case you thought this was any old Wednesday, allow me to set you straight: this is Robot Block Party day with parties going on in various cities around the country. It’s all part of ...
The Griffin Museum of Science and Industry (MSI) hosted its annual Robot Block Party on April 4 and 5 in celebration of National Robotics Week. Graduate students from the University of Chicago, ...
MassRobotics is hosting its seventh annual Robot Block Party on Saturday, Sept. 28th in the Seaport. The Boston nonprofit wants to get people more comfortable with robots as they become more ...
This week's fourth annual Robot Block Party at Stanford felt like something of an obstacle course. If you weren't high-stepping over the slithering robotic snake or doing the "trying to get around you ...
A new robotics breakthrough could revolutionalize how we build everything from airplanes to bridges and even massive superstructures. A team of researchers at the Massachusettes Institute of ...
The non-profit coalition Silicon Valley Robotics held its 14th annual Robot Block Party in Oakland on Saturday, showcasing some of the latest tech in robotics and providing a space for networking.
No robot can reproduce the way that algal cells, begonias, and people can. However, an automaton that’s little more than a stack of blocks has shown that it, too, can make more of its own kind.