seen from Bulgaria

seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from Brunei

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Serbia
seen from China
seen from Japan
seen from Brazil

seen from Serbia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Serbia
seen from China
seen from Serbia
seen from France
seen from Canada

seen from Israel

seen from France
seen from Türkiye
Fat Albert (2005) by Ted Larson and Bob Allen, OLogic, CA, USA. Fat Albert, built in 2005, is a forerunner of AMPbot that could get up on its own from lying on the floor. "Fat Albert had a unique mechanism and software implementation that allowed for transitioning from the floor to standing and then back to the floor again. We applied for multiple patents on the whole setup and have kept them active over the years, but we still haven’t figured out what to do with them. If you have an idea, let me know!" – Ted Larson, From HomeBrew to Hasbro How two friends hacked a balancing robot and wrote a toy story of their own.
Nothing new in self-balancing monorails? Tired of vaporware that will never work? Solve that pesky problem of what to do with trains traveling opposite directions? or of never being scheduled for when you want them??
Ymmv. But I'm personally more excited about MONOCAB's OWL self-balancing monorail project than anything Parallel Systems has come up with yet and certainly waaaaay more better than any Hyperl‰p...
The Mantour X from FlowDot is an electric kickscooter that can go from folded mode to ride and ready mode all in under five seconds.
Mike Rouleau’s old “Self Balancing Stick” inverted pendulum balanced by a 2-axis reaction wheel.
While the debate over electric motorcycles as the future of two-wheeled mobility still simmers, BMW is already thinking ahead unveiling their most recent project dubbed “Ghost Rider.” A fully self-driving BMW R1200GS controlled only by the algorithms inside its computer. The German manufacturer surprised journalists last weekend with a live demonstration of the experimental self-driving …
FOOLS GOLD | Lot