youtube.com — A robot developed by roboticists at the University of Pennsylvania is made of modules that can recognize each other and reassemble when kicked apart. When physically damaged, the T-1000 is capable of reforming itself in seconds, closing up bullet holes and reattaching limbs. Ooops, sorry :) The last sentence is from a different story.
Apr 29, 2008 View in Crawl 4
bikingshaunApr 29, 2008
HUAR
satellitegmlApr 30, 2008
your daughter, she came over and kick my robot, now robot need operation ....why did she do it??
g4sucksnowApr 30, 2008
Its JOHNY 5 DUMBASS
dieskiddyMay 1, 2008
I bet you the robot the whole time as going "one day, You'll be the one getting the boot and beign filmed while you helplessly try to reassemble yourself onto to fall over again"or maybe he was just thinking nothing at all... due to his inability to actually think.We will never know.
eskadeeMay 1, 2008
Stands up, stays up, stays up- fall!......*beepbeep*
wallsofperilMay 9, 2008
Very cool update/advance from similar research at Cornell: <a class="user" href="http://www.sciencentral.com/articles/view.php3?article_id=218392587">http://www.sciencentral.com/articles/view.php3?art ...</a>
PaulTheBookGuyMay 11, 2008
REPLICATORS!
KevinJimenoJan 25, 2011
If it is right then it's a wonderful invent but
With the goal of bringing service robots to help people, PAL Robotics has developed some of the world's most advanced humanoid robots, the REEM series.
<a href="http://www.pal-robotics.com/">REEM-Series</a>