Researchers at TU Delft have developed a new material without doing any experimental tests at all. The supercompressible but strong material was designed by…
Category: News
Students of University of Michigan building the most powerful laser in US
The United States is upgrading its laser capabilities with ZEUS, a new three-petawatt system to be built at the University of Michigan. Three petawatts…
DeepTech Week to accelerate cutting-edge solutions
One week to bring together the best in deep tech and start building solutions for the future. Events, debates, roundtables and various workshops will be…
Do IoT Fieldlab officially launched
The new Do IoT Fieldlab (Delft on the Internet of Things) was officially launched on Wednesday afternoon during a kick-off event on the TU Delft Campus.…
Learning begins at the end of your comfort zone
Ricky Kwok’s computer science research career “accidentally” swerved into academic leadership, but the combination of expertise now makes him one of the world’s top…
U-M solar car – third place on the Bridgestone World Solar Challenge
The University of Michigan Solar Car team took third place at this year’s Bridgestone World Solar Challenge in Australia, the only American team to…
Pushy dynamics for complex object-manipulation tasks
Systems “learn” from novel dataset that captures how pushed objects move, to improve their physical interactions with new objects. MIT researchers have compiled a…
Solar car “Eletrum” on global competition in Australia
In a slender, bullet-shaped car, the University of Michigan Solar Car team race down the Australian outback in the Bridgestone World Solar Challenge. The…
Revolutionising the way we use artificial intelligence
The Giotto project, launched by EPFL startup Learn to Forecast, intends to revolutionise the way we use artificial intelligence. Drawing on the science of…
Machine learning algorithms improves with human help
Machine learning algorithms can sometimes do a better job with a little help from human expertise, at least in the field of materials science.…