Engineers have watched robots master welding seams and pallet stacking for decades. Success on those jobs rarely translates when the task involves something fragile and slightly different every time. An egg in a carton or on a counter represents the exact kind of object that exposes the limits. Too much force cracks the shell. Too little lets it slip. Slight variations in shape, weight distribution, or surface texture throw off systems built around fixed gripper designs or basic vision.
Gamers and creators who want maximum screen space often stack multiple displays. Cables multiply, bezels interrupt the view, and focus splits across gaps. LG offers a different path with the 39GX90SA-W, priced at $799.99 (was $1,600), a single 39-inch curved OLED panel that aims to replace that entire arrangement with one enveloping surface.
Photo credit: Jacey Yarbrough | The University of Texas at Austin
Engineers at the University of Texas at Austin built a jacket that collects moisture from the air and turns it into clean drinking water ready for use. Practical needs for reliable water in remote locations drove much of the project. Many hikers, agricultural workers, and emergency responders operate in areas where carrying enough bottled water or finding safe sources creates constant challenges.
Vigier Ciment has been producing cement in the Jura foothills, just south of Biel, Switzerland, for about 150 years. Their activity continues without interruption, producing around one-fifth of the country’s cement. Over 1000 humming machines deep within the aging buildings require constant maintenance because they can wear out, overheat, leak, or have structural issues, among other things.