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Eight-legged robot modeled after cartwheeling flic-flac spider can curl up into a ball and chase you

Daily Mail - Science & tech

A German technology company has built a robotic spider that looks like the stuff of nightmares. Called the BionicWheelBot, the robo-spider is outfitted with eight terrifyingly spindly legs that allow it to walk, run and transform into a rolling wheel that can chase after you at alarming speeds. Scientists from Festo modeled the somersaulting robot after the real-life flic-flac spider, which is known for its unusual movements. The flic-flac spider is found in the Moroccan desert and can walk like other spiders. But it also has the eye-popping ability to propel itself into the air by rolling and cartwheeling through the air, usually as a means of deterring predators.


Don't Bother Trying to Outrun This Creepy Spiderbot That Transforms Into a Rolling Wheel

#artificialintelligence

If the only thing more terrifying to you than a spider is a spider chasing you, you're not going to want to watch this video of Festo's latest creation. Using eight reconfigurable legs, the BionicWheelBot can creepily crawl along the ground, but then transform into a wheel and roll at an alarming speed. Someone find me a gigantic rolled up newspaper. Unlike Boston Dynamic's creations, such as SpotMini and ATLAS--robots that seem specifically engineered to supplant humanity--Festo's machines are typically far less intimidating; Robotic flying butterflies and hopping kangaroos are more fascinating than fearsome. But the BionicWheelBot, inspired by the real-life flic-flac spider that's known for doing cartwheels to quickly escape a predator, is equal parts technical marvel and terror for anyone who's uneasy around creepy-crawlies. From a functional point of view, the robot's ability to transform makes it ideal for tackling various types of terrain.


Festo's New Bionic Robots Include Rolling Spider, Flying Fox

IEEE Spectrum Robotics

We love Festo because every year they invest an entirely appropriate amount of time and money into bio-inspired robots that are totally cool and very functional but have limited usefulness. More often than not, it seems like Festo is able to take some of what it learns from designing and constructing these things and create practical new revenue-generating products. Which is good for them, and means they'll keep making cool stuff. Over the last few years, we've met ants, butterflies, flying jellyfish and penguins, kangaroos, seagulls, and much more. Festo has just announced its two newest bionic learning network robots--one is a very convincing flying fox, and the other is a walking, tumbling robot inspired by a Saharan spider.