When it comes out later this year, the most creative new set of Lego bricks won’t be available in stores or from any traditional retailer. The only place you’ll be able to find it is in a classroom.
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. A new AI-powered tool created by researchers at Carnegie ...
LEGO has taken its bricks to a new generation of play with the launch of smart bricks, which contain code to light up, interact with other bricks, and make sounds. The Danish company unveiled the ...
Rochester, N.Y. — Brick by brick, practice makes perfect, and the Frederick Douglass R-Center's robotics team is well aware! Tuesday, the Rhythm Robotics prepared its Lego robots for a regional ...
Since 1998, For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology (FIRST) and LEGO Education have partnered to create the FIRST Lego League (FLL) program. On March 19, FIRST released a ...
Small speakers hum as two "Star Wars"-themed Lego lightsabers clash. Lights beam from the top of a Lego-built airplane. A roaring engine sound kicks in as multiple vehicles race across the floor. It's ...
Pliable bricks that stick together like Lego could be the ultimate play set for advanced robotics. George Whitesides and his colleagues at Harvard University have developed a range of soft robots, ...