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Learn the incredible step-by-step process to create an amazing car entirely from cardboard. This video guides you through ...
In total, 50 square meters of cardboard was used in the build and 100 glue gun sticks were sacrificed in the making of the cardboard F1 car. The results are mesmerizing, though.
Explore the ultimate DIY experience as we reveal how to create a life-size Formula 1 racing car using cardboard! This ...
HandiMate, developed by researchers from Purdue and Indiana universities, lets children (or anyone else) build robots with cardboard, velcro, and other cheap, easily available materials.
The car is fitted with four cameras to track surroundings and road markings, and while a joystick lets humans take control if needed—proof that even robots can’t get away from the backseat driver.
Smartibots, a robotics platform engineered around foldable cardboard, launched on Kickstarter in late June. It's projected to ship by the end of 2018.
Most of his mesmerizing sculptures are made with just cardboard, glue, and a knife. Warren shows us how to build our very own robot helmet, using the techniques he's perfected throughout his career.
Now, anyone can be a robotics designer with CardBoardiZer — a new computerized system that lets beginners turn static three-dimensional objects into their own moving robot.
Until recently, you might have added "cardboard robot" to the list. But a project called Kinetic Creatures on the crowd-funding site Kickstarter shows that it's a perfect combination.