Interesting Engineering on MSN
Cornell’s insect-inspired 3D model could allow flapping-wing robots to fly stably
Researchers at Cornell University have developed a 3D computational model that decodes the complex ...
Eloshapes is expanding its PC mouse comparison with 3D scans of many models. Interested parties can check there how the ...
A Moffitt Cancer Center researcher has introduced a new model that addresses one of biology's most fundamental questions: How does genetic information keep living systems organized and therefore alive ...
Jeffrey Stansbury, Ph.D., senior associate dean for research and professor at the CU Anschutz School of Dental Medicine, has ...
Taking on its US rival in Britain is expected to lead to ‘collateral damage’ for UK retailers ...
Since the early 20th century, people’s skulls have got rounder and their jaws have got wider, probably because of changes in ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Programmable 3D-printed filaments mimic artificial muscles with heat-driven bending and twisting
Nature is replete with slender filaments that bend and coil—from climbing grape vines, to folded proteins, to elephant trunks that can pick up a peanut but also take down a tree.
Credit: IGN Nintendo of America's former president Reggie Fils-Aimé has addressed the failure of Wii U, which he blamed on ...
The Phillips Collection's "Miró and the United States" exhibition highlights creative exchanges between Catalan modernist ...
Scientists have developed a new material that could shield humans and critical technology from harmful radiation.
MIT has refined an approximately 40-year-old technique to transform flexible objects into a rigid state. The Y-zipper comes ...
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