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This robotic hand taught itself to solve a Rubik’s Cube By Mike Wehner Published Oct 15th, 2019 7:06PM EDT Image: OpenAI ...
The researchers deployed ADR with a cube-scrambling technique that applied around 20 moves to a solved Rubik’s cube to scramble it, in accordance with official World Cube Association guidelines.
And it’s why the lab wanted the world to see a demo of its robotic hand solving a Rubik’s Cube. On Tuesday, the lab released a 50-page research paper describing the science of the project.
Helping Hand OpenAI, the artificial intelligence development company co-founded by Elon Musk, just released software that lets an AI-powered robot hand that solve a Rubik's cube by itself.
To learn how to solve a Rubik’s cube one-handed, OpenAI did not explicitly program Dactyl to solve the toy; free software on the internet can do that for you.
Over a year ago, OpenAI, the San Francisco–based for-profit AI research lab, announced that it had trained a robotic hand to manipulate a cube with remarkable dexterity. That might not sound ...
A robotic hand solving Rubik’s cube has all the makings of hype headlines, but underlying OpenAI’s latest achievement is some subtler, more interesting science.
2. Research Much like traditional models might have a specific modeling type or might wear several different hats, hand models can range from being super-niche to taking on a diversity of roles ...
The deal here isn't so much that it was able to solve the Rubik's cube, but that it did the task with a new level of dexterity. The robot arm was able to solve the '80s puzzle game with a single hand.