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Image by Pawel Czerwinski

Robotics: Smarter, Smaller, Faster

Scientists are pushing the limits with microbots that swarm like ants, autonomous drone fleets inspired by animal behavior, and robots that can flow like liquids or build intricate structures collaboratively. These innovations promise breakthroughs in medicine, construction, disaster response, and more.


World’s Tiniest Robots Swarming Like Ants – South Korean microbots use magnetic fields to collaborate and carry heavy loads. https://www.thesun.co.uk/tech/32406711/minibots-test-south-korea-ant-swarm


Swarm of Autonomous Drones Inspired by Animal Movements – Hungarian researchers build 100-drone swarms for dynamic real-time coordination. https://apnews.com/article/autonomous-drones-animal-swarms-0e146f4221e81f4442674a125f86501d


Autonomous Robot Swarms Performing Complex Missions – Robots programmed to work together sequentially for diverse tasks. https://www.advancedsciencenews.com/autonomous-robot-swarms-come-together-to-perform-a-variety-of-missions


Microbots Swarming to Build Structures – Tiny magnetic robots construct intricate materials collaboratively. https://www.wired.com/story/the-adorable-microbots-that-swarm-to-build-structures


Robot Swarm That Flows Like Liquid and Supports Weight – Robots that change state to adapt to dynamic environments. https://singularityhub.com/2025/02/24/this-robot-swarm-can-flow-like-liquid-and-support-a-humans-weight/


The future is here—robotic swarms are no longer science fiction but practical tools reshaping technology and daily life.



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