General-purpose robots remain rare not for a lack of hardware but because we still can’t give machines the physical intuition ...
Bright Side on MSN
My neighbor refuses to clean up after his dog—I returned the favor
Some neighborhood problems are small... until they aren’t. One of our readers wrote to us about a situation almost every city ...
Golf Digest on MSN
Wrong balls, rangefinder woes and bird poop: The most outrageous rules issues of 2025
Regardless, just like the PGA Tour, LIV Golf has a Model Local Rule that says you have to play the same type of ball ...
The "Regular Animals" art installation shows public figures in a new light, with Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and others depicted as robotic dogs.
On General Hospital, Gio (Giovanni Mazza) and Emma (Braedyn Bruner) thought they were just breaking into Dalton’s (ex-Daniel ...
"But there I stood pretending not to notice until finally my resident came over and whispered, 'Why are you still standing ...
Here's where to never stash your coat on a plane, why flight attendants cringe when passengers do it—and what you should do ...
The Charles River is far cleaner than decades ago. How much should the ratepayers spend, and how quickly, to finish the job?
Called “Regular Animals,” this pack of $100,000 robotic dogs has metal bodies that are painted fleshy pink yet are outfitted with rubbery, realistic heads that look like Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and ...
Futurism on MSN
Billionaires’ Fleshy Heads Put on Robot Dog Bodies
And these aren’t just any old robotic abominations. Winkelmann’s not-so-subtle twist lies in his choice of heads: billionaire tech moguls like Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Jeff Bezos.
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
The Ten Best Children’s Books of 2025 Feature a Story of Untrustworthy Fish and a Tribute to a Beloved Bus Driver
This year’s top titles run the gamut and include an adaption of a Korean folk tale, a highly entertaining question-and-answer ...
12don MSN
Climate change is straining Alaska’s Arctic. A new mining road may push the region past the brink
In Northwest Alaska, a proposed 211-mile mining road has divided an Inupiaq community already devastated by climate change.
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