liquibot
Garmin launches new Vivomove and Venu 2 Plus watches with host of non-fitness features
Garmin has launched new smartwatches – with a host of new, non-fitness features. The company is best known for its sporty, activity-focused watches, which include GPS mapping and other tools for tracking runs, cycling and other exercise. But in recent years it has looked to expand further into the more casual market opened up by wearables such as the Apple Watch, with watches that are intended to be worn all of the time. Both of the new watches – the Vevomove Sport and Venu 2 Plus – include activity tracking tools. But they look more like traditional watches and include other features to be used when not working out.
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Scientists build first self-powered 'liquibots' that run continuously without electricity
Inspired by water-walking insects, scientists have built liquid robots that work autonomously and continuously without the need for electrical inputs, transporting chemicals back and forth while partially submerged in solution. The "liquibot" technology may lead to further developments in automated chemical synthesis or drug delivery systems for pharmaceuticals, say the researchers, including those from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in the US. Earlier studies had demonstrated the working of liquibots that autonomously perform a task, but just once, and some that can perform a task continuously, but need electricity to do so continuously. In the new research, published in the journal Nature Chemistry, scientists demonstrated the first self-powered liquid robot – which look like little open sacks just 2mm in diameter – that can run continuously on energy from the chemicals in its surroundings instead of electricity. "We have broken a barrier in designing a liquid robotic system that can operate autonomously by using chemistry to control an object's buoyancy," study co-author Tom Russell from Berkeley Lab's Materials Sciences Division said in a statement.