Interesting Engineering on MSN
New self-healing artificial ‘pain nerves’ could give humanoid robots human-like reflexes
Chinese researchers have built a self-healing gelatin sensor that lets robots rate pain and protect themselves after damage.
A new wave of GoBruteforcer botnet malware attacks is targeting databases of cryptocurrency and blockchain projects on ...
RondoDox botnet exploits the React2Shell vulnerability in Next.js, with over 90,000 exposed systems used to deploy miners and ...
Scrolling through the bot’s history of bets, it wins far more often than it loses, putting fairly large sums (routinely between $200 and $20,000) on very marginal improvements, bringing in modest wins ...
At 39C3, experts demonstrate how poor the security of humanoid robots is. The range of attacks extends to jailbreaking the ...
The author of the award-winning science fiction novel Annie Bot, the January read for the New Scientist Book Club, on how she ...
"The Matrix" revolutionized how we thought of the '90s and beyond, with a cast of cool cyberpunk heroes and villains. We rank ...
Paying for Google One or iCloud? We break down the math to show when owning a NAS costs less than cloud storage.
Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. For many, iRobot’s Roomba robot vacuum was their first experience with a home robot. When I got my Roomba in ...
David Mytton, founder and CEO of Arcjet, leads the developer-focused security startup that helps teams embed robust protections like bot detection, rate limiting, email validation, attack mitigation, ...
LEVEL on MSNOpinion
Driving on the Left Side of the Road: a Crash Course on Critical Thinking
Driving on the left side of the road reminded me that when the rules change, autopilot will kill you. Attention saves you.
Chemist Anne Lüscher showed at 39C3 how synthetic DNA can be used for data storage and tamper-proof authentication.
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