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mikhail-miguel

Spacely Artificial Intelligence - Make your dream space a reality (spacely.ai). - 0 views

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    Spacely Artificial Intelligence: Make your dream space a reality (spacely.ai).
mikhail-miguel

Spacely Artificial Intelligence - Make your dream space a reality (spacely.ai). - 0 views

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    Spacely Artificial Intelligence: Make your dream space a reality (spacely.ai).
mikhail-miguel

One Click Article Creator - A powerful tool designed to help content creators and marke... - 0 views

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    One Click Article Creator: A powerful tool designed to help content creators and marketers generate high-quality articles with just a single click (buildai.space). One Click Article Creator: Designed to help content creators and marketers generate high-quality articles with just a single click (buildai.space).
Aasemoon =)

Autonomous Satellite Chasers Can Use Robotic Vision to Capture Orbiting Satellites | Po... - 0 views

  • UC3M's ASIROV Robotic Satellite Chaser Prototype ASIROV, the Acoplamiento y Agarre de Satélites mediante Sistemas Robóticos basado en Visión (Docking and Capture of Satellites through computer vision) would use computer vision tech to autonomously chase down satellites in orbit for repair or removal. Image courtesy of Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Spanish robotics engineers have devised a new weapon in the battle against zombie-sats and space junk: an automated robotics system that employs computer vision technology and algorithmic wizardry to allow unmanned space vehicles to autonomously chase down, capture, and even repair satellites in orbit. Scientists at the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M) created the system to allow for the removal of rogue satellites from low earth orbit or the maintenance of satellites that are nearing the ends of their lives, prolonging their service (and extending the value of large investments in satellite tech). Through a complex set of algorithms, space vehicles known as “chasers” could be placed into orbit with the mission of policing LEO, chasing down satellites that are damaged or have gone “zombie” and dealing with them appropriately.
mikhail-miguel

CopyFish - Copy, paste and translate text from any image, video or PDF (ocr.space). - 0 views

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    CopyFish: Copy, paste and translate text from any image, video or PDF (ocr.space).
mikhail-miguel

Mage - Free, fast text-to-image Artificial Intelligence with stable diffusion (mage.spa... - 0 views

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    Mage: Free, fast text-to-image Artificial Intelligence with stable diffusion (mage.space).
mikhail-miguel

Godmode - A tool with a visual interface to interact with ChatGPT language model (godmo... - 0 views

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    Godmode: A tool with a visual interface to interact with ChatGPT language model (godmode.space).
mikhail-miguel

AI Trip Planner - Create detailed, day-by-day itineraries for any destination (buildai.... - 0 views

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    AI Trip Planner: Create detailed, day-by-day itineraries for any destination (buildai.space).
mikhail-miguel

MindPal - Enhanced online learning with interactive support (mindpal.space). - 0 views

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    MindPal: Enhanced online learning with interactive support (mindpal.space).
mikhail-miguel

Mage - Free, fast text-to-image Artificial Intelligence with stable diffusion (mage.spa... - 0 views

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    Mage: Free, fast text-to-image Artificial Intelligence with stable diffusion (mage.space).
mikhail-miguel

GPT Workspace - Boost productivity with GPT Workspace across Google applications (gpt.s... - 0 views

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    GPT Workspace: Boost productivity with GPT Workspace across Google applications (gpt.space).
Aasemoon =)

IEEE Spectrum: EPOS Robotic Facility Simulates Satellite Repair Mission - 0 views

  • Space robotics may appear to be a purely scientific endeavor -- brave little rovers exploring planets in search of life -- but it turns out there's a multi-million dollar market in space just waiting for the right kind of robot. This market is satellite servicing. Geostationary communication satellites fire small thrusters to stay in orbit. When they run out of fuel (typically helium or hydrazine), or when a battery or gyroscope fails, these expensive satellites often have to be abandoned, becoming just another piece of space junk, even though their mechanical systems and electronics work fine.
mikhail-miguel

No Code Family - World 1st Review Platform dedicated to the no-code space, powered by A... - 0 views

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    No Code Family: World 1st Review Platform dedicated to the no-code space, powered by Artificial Intelligence (nocodefamily.com).
mikhail-miguel

Alphy - Ask Questions on YouTube and Twitter Spaces with Ease (alphy.app). - 0 views

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    Alphy: Ask Questions on YouTube and Twitter Spaces with Ease (alphy.app).
Aasemoon =)

IEEE Spectrum: Humanoid Robot Justin Learning To Fix Satellites - 0 views

  • Justin is a dexterous humanoid robot that can make coffee. Now it's learning to fix satellites. Justin was developed at the Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics, part of the German Aerospace Center (DLR), in Wessling, Germany. The robot has different configurations, including one with wheels. The space version has a head, torso, and arms, but no wheels or legs, because it will be mounted on a spacecraft or satellite. The goal is to use Justin to repair or refuel satellites that need to be serviced. Its creators say that ideally the robot would work autonomously. To replace a module or refuel, for example, you'd just press a button and the robot would do the rest. But that's a long-term goal. For now, the researchers are relying on another approach: robotic telepresence. A human operator controls the robot from Earth, using a head-mounted display and a kind of arm exoskeleton. That way the operator can see what the robot sees and also feel the forces the robot is experiencing.
mikhail-miguel

GrammarlyGO (communication assistant) - 0 views

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    GrammarlyGO brings the power of generative AI to the digital spaces you write in most.
Aasemoon =)

Artificial Intelligence and Robotics: LuminAR to shine a light on the future - 0 views

  • You might think that some devices in the modern age have reached their maximum development level, such as the common desk-lamp, but you would be wrong. Natan Linder, a student from The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has created a robotic version that can not only light your room, but project internet pages on your desk as well. It is an upgrade on the AUR lamp from 2007, which tracks movements around a desk or table and can alter the color, focus, and strength of its light to suit the user’s needs. The LuminAR comes with those abilities, and much more. The robotic arm can move about on its own, and combines a vision system with a pico projector, wireless computer and camera. When turned on, the projector will look for a flat space around your room on which to display images. Since it can project more than one internet window, you can check your email and browse another website at the same time.
Aasemoon =)

Odex I Hexapod Robot From 1984 | BotJunkie - 0 views

  • Commenter Cynox was browsing through the 137 years of Popular Science magazine which are now available online, and he noticed this robot in the September 1984 issue. Called Odex I, it was developed by a (now apparently defunct) company called Odetics. Odex was six and a half feet tall, had six legs, and was fully capable of walking. Although it only weighed 370 pounds, each of its legs could lift 400 pounds. It could dead lift some 2100 pounds, and carry 900 pounds while walking at normal speed (which was about 18 inches per second). Odex used a tripod gait, and the fishbowl thing on top contained sensors that helped it avoid obstacles. It was one of the first robots with an onboard computer that helped coordinate all of its limbs. Since the limbs could articulate themselves in several directions independently, Odex was able to rapidly change its limb configuration to squeeze through tight spaces, move quickly, or lift stuff. It was able to climb into the back of a truck through a combination of automated step behaviors and teleoperation, which was pretty damn good for 1984.
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