Qumus is a physically embodied, multi-agent AI system that autonomously plans, executes, analyzes, and refines quantum-materials experiments inside a robotic minilab.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Low-power, flexible radio-frequency transistors break 100 GHz barrier
Over the past decades, electronics engineers worldwide have been trying to develop devices that could enable even faster communications between devices, all while consuming less energy. To meet the ...
Back in the 80s, buying a home computer could easily mean an inflation-adjusted cost of thousands of dollars (or your equivalent currency unit of choice), and all for an 8-bit machine that might ...
In the long ago, pre-internet days when your clock project wasn’t an ESP32 getting its timing via NTP over WiFi, it was still ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Watch: YouTuber turns LEGO WALL-E into real robot with sounds, gyros, and 2,000V taser
A YouTuber has transformed the official LEGO WALL-E set into a fully functional remote-controlled ...
5don MSN
'Designer' superconducting diamond: Researchers uncover path to multi-modality quantum chips
Diamond is extremely valuable to science and technology not for its sparkle but for its extreme hardness, high thermal ...
Photonic devices are hardware systems that can process information using light instead of electricity. These systems could ...
IEEE Spectrum on MSN
Junctionless transistors show a new path to 3D chips
Roll-on nanoscale membranes make circuits that stretch across 3 layers of silicon ...
XDA Developers on MSN
I paired a Raspberry Pi with an ESP32, and it unlocked projects I never thought of before
A Raspberry Pi can do a lot, but adding an ESP32 gives it the physical reach that small hardware projects often need.
The ESP32-C5 C-ITS receiver project is an open-source hardware board that gathers data over 802.11p V2X communication from nearby traffic lights, public transportation (buses, trams…), trucks, cars, ...
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