You’ve seen Glock 4, now Anduril Industries unveils Bolt-M, a military drone that comes equipped with advanced onboard AI/ML software to automate the flight behaviors required to find, track, and strike dynamic targets.
Jump Aero’s JA1 Pulse may be years away from regulatory approval, while the Jetson ONE has just completed the world’s first single-seat eVTOL freestyle flight. Priced from $120,000+, operating the Jetson ONE is akin to driving a car, but doing so in the sky, thanks to its simplified controls.
Photo credit: Slimanna
A Tesla Model 3 was spotted on a highway with its windshield covered, with no driver in visible sight. This would lead one to believe that its driver is using the latest unsupervised Full Self-Driving (FSD), but the latter utilizes an in-cabin camera to monitor eye movements to prevent situations like sleeping while behind the wheel.
Researchers from the JSK Robotics Laboratory at the University of Tokyo have developed an AI-powered robot cooking system capable of frying an egg using a recipe. Put simply, a recipe description is first inputted into the system and then converted into the function sequence by a Large Language Model (LLM).
NASA / ESA’s Hubble Space Telescope captured a mesmerizing image of Messier 80 (M80) that appears even more unbelievable when panning across the stellar swarm. This globular cluster is located approximately 32,600 light-years from Earth in the constellation Scorpius and contains hundreds of thousands of stars, all held together by their mutual gravitational attraction.
Tesla’s Optimus humanoid robot made a big splash at the company’s We, Robot event this week, and several were spotted interacting with guests. We now know that it can respond to questions semi-autonomously since there is still a remote human operator somewhere, and also dance.
Aspyr and Crystal Dynamics’ Tomb Raider IV-VI Remastered is set to be released on February 14, 2025, allowing fans to re-experience the next remastered chapters of Lara Croft’s darkest adventures.
ETH Zurich researchers have figured out how to use a swarm of tiny drones to map rooms, or any other space for that matter. More specifically, drones based on the modular Crazyflie platform, which utilizes stackable printed circuit boards (PCBs) to expand their capabilities.