shermantanktop 42 minutes ago

This is what non-commercial tech looked like back before the gold rush and vulture capital. Geeks and nerds in basements doing weird stuff that would be laughed at by most people on the street. Most STEM professions were middle class, not lottery tickets.

falsaberN1 an hour ago

Makes perfect sense, in nature you have a lot of both practical and odd functionality out of filling "bags" with air or liquid.

This is a pretty cool approach. If they can improve the visual presentation it can also look pretty awesome. Gives me some inspiration for drawing scifi designs too.

giantg2 3 hours ago

I would love to see this with nitinol wire muscles.

  • mhb 3 hours ago

    Power use would be immense and it would be insanely slow.

    • jrflo an hour ago

      Considering 90%+ of the input energy goes to heat with NiTi actuators, Your walking robot would also double as a great space heater.

    • giantg2 2 hours ago

      Power use might be high depending on configuration, but speed shouldn't be that slow using capacitors. Sufficiently strong pneumatics tend to require quite a bit of power too.

asn_tech_2019 7 hours ago

Cool... their biggest failure pushed them to find what they are actually good at.

Markoff 7 hours ago

It's robot from 1990 and no, there is no video of the robot actually walking.

bitwize 8 hours ago

A guy named Walker developing legged-robot software is even more on the nose than a guy named Karpathy developing autonomous-vehicle software.