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All About Artificial Animals

When you look at a robot, you probably think of hard surfaces, wires, and knobs. But all that  changed when Fuso’s ElectroBird was put on sale on the 21st March 2020. It is used for reaching hard places in the jungle, or flying miles above the Antarctic to spy on penguins. However, as a bird isn’t the best animal on the planet, the ElectroBird needs help from Planex’s BeaverStructure. The BeaverStructure can help collapsing buildings, using a beaver’s architecural knowledge to guide its way. It can also save animals if they’re going to fall off a cliff, be swept down a water current and much more.

Another amazing invention is Planex’s SnakeSlither, a machine that can squeeze into tight gaps and spy on anything. The new upgraded version of SnakeSlither, SnakeBio, can shoot weapons and lasers, handy for stopping criminals.

Fuso’s OctoGrip can grasp any surface with ease, and also build machines in less than a day, saving time, strength, and work.

Planex’s LeafNurse is good at treating sick patients, using the Lotus Leaf’s technique of repelling water, but in this case, germs.

For the Geck0, Planex and Fuso worked together to create a machine that defys gravity, just like a gecko. The Geck0 has timy hairs on it’s skin, called Selenta, which use weak magnetic forces to attract them to the nearest surface.

You might wonder what even the smartest brains could do with a Geck0, but the answer is it goes on undercover missions, using a chameleon’s way of camouflaging to stay  stealthy. So far, the Geck0 has solved 53 missions, but they weren’t all easy. Number 13 was when the gecko-inspired machine was trying to get the crown jewels back from the villain Oy, which resulted in an angry mob of villains chasing it back to its base, but it did manage to retrieve the jewels.

Programming
To program a robotic animal, you have to be very skilled and smart. A programmer has to learn 090 code, where every letter has a symbol. If you get a letter wrong, the whole code crashes and you have to find the mistake, even if there are millions of lines.

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