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Marianne Ayala/Insider
Insider asked self-driving startups, analysts, and VCs to nominate the industry s biggest stars.
The one rule: no CEOs.
The list features employees from Tesla, Zoox, Morgan Stanley, and more.
While CEOs and founders get most of the attention in the startup world, even the best leaders need a strong team behind them.
In the autonomous-vehicle industry, it can be difficult to identify the most important supporting players from the outside. Most companies are still testing and refining technology that could be years from widespread use, so it s not always clear whose products are working and whose aren t.
HUMRS during its March 2021 underwater demonstration. PHOTO SOURCE: Carnegie Mellon University
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) have developed a submersible, snakelike robot that could be used to inspect ships and underwater infrastructure, including offshore rigs and pipelines.
Last month a team from the Biorobotics Lab in the university’s School of Computer Science’s Robotics Institute tested the modular reptilian robot – formally known as the Hardened Underwater Modular Robot Snake (HUMRS) – in Carnegie Mellon’s swimming pool. According to a written statement from the university, the demonstration showcased HUMRS’ ease of control and ability to dive through underwater hoops and swim smoothly and precisely
By Jason Maderer
Apr 16, 2021
A snake-like robot can now slither its way through water, allowing it to inspect ships, submarines, and underwater infrastructure for damage.
Researchers from the Biorobotics Lab in the School of Computer Science’s Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University tested the hardened underwater modular robot snake (HUMRS) last month in the pool, diving the robot through underwater hoops, showing off its precise and smooth swimming, and demonstrating its ease of control.
“We can go places that other robots cannot,” says Howie Choset, professor of computer science. “It can snake around and squeeze into hard-to-reach underwater spaces.” Choset and Matt Travers, co-directors of the Biorobotics Lab, led the work.
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