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Zeitpunkt              Nutzer    Delta   Tröts        TNR     Titel                     Version  maxTL
Sa 20.07.2024 00:00:00     7.213      +1      605.193    83,9 NerdCulture               4.2.10   1.000
Fr 19.07.2024 13:58:59     7.212      -7      604.919    83,9 NerdCulture               4.2.10   1.000
Do 18.07.2024 00:01:10     7.219      +1      604.296    83,7 NerdCulture               4.2.10   1.000
Mi 17.07.2024 00:01:12     7.218       0      603.750    83,6 NerdCulture               4.2.10   1.000
Di 16.07.2024 00:01:11     7.218      +1      603.122    83,6 NerdCulture               4.2.10   1.000
Mo 15.07.2024 00:01:11     7.217       0      602.695    83,5 NerdCulture               4.2.10   1.000
So 14.07.2024 00:00:03     7.217      +1      602.204    83,4 NerdCulture               4.2.10   1.000
Sa 13.07.2024 00:00:07     7.216      +1      601.736    83,4 NerdCulture               4.2.10   1.000
Fr 12.07.2024 00:01:56     7.215      -1      601.162    83,3 NerdCulture               4.2.10   1.000
Do 11.07.2024 00:00:16     7.216       0      600.675    83,2 NerdCulture               4.2.10   1.000

Sa 20.07.2024 15:00

Watch a 6-Axis Motor solve a Rubik’s Cube in less than a third of a Second.

The last time a human set the world record for solving a Rubik's Cube, it was Max Park, at 3.13 seconds for a standard 3×3×3 cube, set in June 2023. TOKUFASTbot, can actually pull off a solve in as little as 0.204 seconds. The previous mechanical record was 0.38 seconds.

youtu.be/59qgzzSD1tk

Alternatively, you might ask if this was a specially modified cube. Was there some kind of lubrication involved, given the role friction must play in shaving hundredths of a second off a prior world record? Guinness post notes that there was

Alternatively, you might ask if this was a specially modified cube. Was there some kind of lubrication involved, given the role friction must play in shaving hundredths of a second off a prior world record? Guinness post notes that there was "an unexpected issue" with Mitsubishi's attempt: "the puzzle cube struggled to keep up with the speed of the robot!" (exclamation theirs). The solution was vaguely described as the team fine-tuning the machine, according to Guinness. The cube certainly looks the part of a regular Rubik's. But if you're looking for an asterisk so that humans can hold onto some kind of Rubik rubric, that might be one angle.

[ImageSource: Mitsubishi Electric]

Details about this particular robot:

•It is a camera, an industrial PC, a touch panel, and a 6-axis servo motor, connected to some very big sequencers, motion units, and servo amplifiers
•It can rotate its arms 90 degrees in 0.009 seconds
•It used

[ImageSource: Mitsubishi Electric] Details about this particular robot: •It is a camera, an industrial PC, a touch panel, and a 6-axis servo motor, connected to some very big sequencers, motion units, and servo amplifiers •It can rotate its arms 90 degrees in 0.009 seconds •It used "a color recognition algorithm that applies AI technology" •Key to the robot was "high-speed signal connections and control between devices) •The spinning ("winding") arms come from the team's experience in both home appliance and railway building, specifically making wire coils during motor manufacture •AI worked to differentiate colors when positioning, shadows, or lighting might trip up a color sensor.

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