I wanted to see if this AI-powered wearable robot could give my regular bike ride the equivalent upgrade of an e-bike. After ...
There’s a new battleground for consumer wearables. We’ve seen smartwatches, smart eyewear, even smart toothbrushes. Now we ...
I wore the Hypershell X Ultra S exoskeleton hiking at the Grand Canyon and during my normal routine. The AI system makes ...
The hardware looks straightforward at first glance: a waist belt connected to hinged braces along the thighs, but the mechanics beneath do more than stabilize movement.
We covered the original X Ultra when it picked up the IFA Innovation Award last September — here's our take from then. The X ...
The surprising thing about the exoskeleton is that it works at all. The apparatus is centered around an armature of carbon ...
The world’s first AI-verified exoskeleton just launched with Everest-sized ambitions ...
Vastnaut, a pioneering wearable robotics startup, today announced the successful conclusion of its three-day Demo Day in ...
Hypershell, a Chinese manufacturer of wearable robotic external skeletons that support human movement, has secured USD50 ...
Hypershell, the world's leading consumer exoskeleton brand, today launched the New Hypershell X Series, introducing the world's most intuitive exoskeleton and its latest lineup of AI-powered ...
The new AI-powered Hypershell X Ultra promises to cut your hiking effort by 20 percent. I took the $2,000 motorized chassis to the Grand Canyon to test whether it’s a game-changer or a gimmick.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
This 3D-printed exoskeleton moves like a real spine
A DIY cervical exoskeleton with liner bearings for near-frictionless movement — designed to support a helmet's weight without ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results