Interesting Engineering on MSN
Robots get new ‘brain’ system inspired by birds, ants to navigate without GPS
Robots, the team argues, can mimic these abilities using a quantum magnetometer (which detects magnetic field direction).
It has long been known that birds, and even humans, use celestial cues to navigate vast distances. Now, tiny nocturnal Australian insects have been found to use stars as a guiding compass during their ...
Each spring, billions of bogong moths fill southeast Australia’s skies. Fleeing the lowlands and trying to beat the heat, they fly roughly 600 miles to caves embedded in the Australian Alps. The moths ...
We live in a time of great uncertainty, a pivotal moment in history when social and technological changes are accelerating, leaving anxiety in their wake. Polarization and isolation have weakened ...
FAYETTE COUNTY, W.Va. (WCHS) — No matter if it's fishing, hiking or hunting, many opt to use use a cell phone to navigate, but that approach can be a double-edged sword. Dave Bieri, district ...
Australia's iconic bogong moth, which migrates hundreds of kilometres each year to a few select caves in the Australian Alps. In a world-first discovery, researchers have shown that Australia’s iconic ...
Totem, creators of the viral Totem Compass, the offline, wearable GPS tracker built for live events, today announced a major new update to the Totem Compass App, introducing navigable festival maps ...
Totem has updated its app to become a powerful navigation tool, offering offline interactive maps for everyone, even without a Totem device.
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