ROBÔ
Science and Technology
Forget the worker hanging up high, a robot that sticks to metal through pure suction has begun to climb the giant towers of wind turbines in China, carrying five kilos of sensors and detecting every crack that threatens the structure.
Maria Heloisa Barbosa Borges 10/06/2026 at 15:58
Science and Technology
Chinese drone BZK-005 receives new technology capable of locating radars, mapping communications, identifying radio frequency emitters, and conducting electronic intelligence missions in strategic areas near Japan, Taiwan, and the Western Pacific.
Andriely Medeiros de Araújo 08/06/2026 at 23:11
Science and Technology
Imagine walking into a dealership to buy a humanoid robot instead of a car: this is exactly the future that BYD is designing, leveraging the same batteries, motors, and artificial intelligence from their vehicles to create autonomous machines, although there is no release date yet.
Maria Heloisa Barbosa Borges 07/06/2026 at 01:38
Agribusiness
China presents the country’s first robot capable of harvesting fresh grains in the field with a success rate of over 90%, using computer vision and robotic arms with force sensors that grasp delicate pods without damaging them even amidst dense vegetation.
Maria Heloisa Barbosa Borges 01/06/2026 at 11:47
Science and Technology
He looks alien, and it’s on purpose: the Helios abandons the legs of common humanoid robots and gains four arms to move, anchor, and operate in zero gravity, with the promise of eventually even helping with the maintenance of satellites and structures in orbit.
Maria Heloisa Barbosa Borges 30/05/2026 at 17:44
Science and Technology
DARPA prepares a space robot that can “repair” satellites 36,000 km from Earth: The mission aims to launch a vehicle capable of refueling, repairing, and repositioning satellites in geostationary orbit, extending the lifespan of equipment valued at hundreds of millions of dollars for years and reducing space debris in the future.
Ruth Rodrigues 27/05/2026 at 22:38
Science and Technology
A robot named Walter does the work of five bricklayers per hour and can save the construction industry, where the average age of professionals is 46 years and almost no one wants to learn the trade anymore, in the United Kingdom.
Maria Heloisa Barbosa Borges 23/05/2026 at 13:27
Science and Technology
