Engineering
Latest about Engineering
The world's smallest radio receiver has parts that are two atoms in size
By Duncan Geere published
A team of Harvard engineers has built the world's smallest radio receiver out of atom-scale defects in pink diamond.
The muscles of our robot overlords will be made of nylon
By Duncan Geere published
MIT researchers have come up with a simple, low-cost ingredient for building muscle fibres for robots - nylon.
Heat will help us build the ultra-dense hard drives of the future
By Duncan Geere published
Researchers at Singapore's Agency for Science, Technology and Research have designed a system that uses heat to position a drive head more accurately than ever before.
Brain-controlled robot exoskeletons can help stroke patients move again
By Duncan Geere published
Using the power of thought, Swiss robots are allowing stroke patients to once again move their paralysed limbs
Self-driving boats are coming to Amsterdam
By Duncan Geere published
MIT has partnered with the Dutch to build boats that can navigate the city's waterways without a pilot.
Electric vehicles get another boost to range and efficiency
By Duncan Geere published
Engineers at North Carolina State University have built a new type of inverter that offers greater efficiency in a smaller, lighter package.
Self-propelling liquid metal takes us a step closer to the Terminator
By Duncan Geere published
Engineers are working on using liquid metal to build 'soft' circuit systems that can be reconfigured on the fly.
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