How to Build Your Very Own Levitating Disco Ball
In More Info | No commentElectromagnetism, feedback, and the power of disco keep this orbiting mirror ball aloft.
Electromagnetism, feedback, and the power of disco keep this orbiting mirror ball aloft.
Frank Malina’s engineering team at JPL developed these rockets during World War II to shorten the takeoff distance of military aircraft.
Vibrating motors in this glove teach an 11-year-old kid to touch-type.
We built flat-panel monitor and foot pedals so that you’ll never have to hand-turn a music book page again.
This photo editor morphs your rainy pictures into sunny days with attribute algorithms.
Car doors and backseats become invisible with this nearly magical technology
Turtle Sense could help predicts when baby turtles will swarm out of their nests
Designed for the DARPA ARM challenge, this rubber-jointed robot hand can use a power drill, change a tire, and unlock a door with a key.
Spectrum takes Bebop’s VR first person video flying for a test flight.
You don’t need a high-powered telescope to spot the signature of an alien world.
Suitable Technologies opens its first store for telepresence robots, without a single human staff member on site.
Pepper, a humanoid robot created by Aldebaran Robotics and SoftBank, dances to classical music.
Pepper is a social humanoid robot designed as a companion for the home. It was created by Aldebaran Robotics and SoftBank. Aldebaran’s chief marketing officer Laura Bokobza explains Pepper’s capabilities and possibilities.
Squadrone System’s auto-follow drone can take 360° video selfies.
One part video game, one part reality TV, one part Formula One: The Corvette Z06’s onboard Performance Data Recorder not only makes driving better, but makes better drivers.
This autonomous quadcopter uses a smartphone for autonomous flight, using only on-board hardware and vision algorithms, no GPS.
The OTOTO synthesizer board can be wired to almost anything, so you can make almost anything a musical instrument. Fruit, a glove, or a cardboard guitar.
Virginia Tech’s DARPA robot THOR fights fires on ships, while ESCHER will take on disaster areas.
It sounds like science fiction, but the Navy is ready to put an electric gun into shipboard testing at sea.
Quantum dots get their intense colors–and energy efficiency–by confining emitted light to narrow spectral bands. Nanosys CEO Jason Hartlove explains.