Orbot Robotics’ space robot has four arms, but its Goro physique has a purpose
In microgravity, legs do not do much. Orbit Robotics’ Helios replaces them with four arms built for movement and station work.
This four-armed robot could make routine space-station work easier for astronauts
Orbit Robotics
Helios is a new four-armed robot from Zurich-based Orbit Robotics, and at first glance, it reminded me of Goro from Mortal Kombat. But unlike the prince from Outworld, Helios is not built for combat. It is designed to help astronauts on space stations with the repetitive, time-consuming work that keeps life in space running.
Orbit Robotics says that in microgravity, legs are not much help. Instead of walking or standing, Helios needs to move through tight station interiors, hold itself steady, and handle cargo, tools, or equipment. Its four-arm design turns extra limbs into both mobility aids and working hands.
Why four arms make sense in orbit
The design looks strange because most humanoid robots, like the Unitree G1 and Tesla Optimus, are still shaped around Earth-based movement. Helios takes a more practical approach for space.
Its arms do not use bulky motors at every joint. Instead, they are tendon-driven, with motors placed closer to the shoulders, and force is transferred through cables and spools. This should help keep the arms lighter while still giving them the range of motion needed for station work.
Helios also uses a rolling-contact elbow joint, which gives it smoother and more controlled movement. Sudden or uneven motion in space can destabilize the robot, so this mundane-looking feature is actually quite important. The four-arm setup also allows the robot to stabilize its position with two arms and use the other pair to handle cargo, tools, or equipment.
Built to save astronaut hours
Unloading cargo, sorting supplies, tracking inventory, moving equipment, and basic maintenance take up a large chunk of astronauts’ time in space. Maintenance alone is said to account for around 35% of crew time, while one cargo unloading cycle can take nearly 50 hours.
At roughly $140,000 per astronaut hour, routine work in space is expensive. A robot like Helios could help reduce how much of that time is spent on logistics and maintenance.

I’ve got about 4 years of experience, mostly covering gaming, PC hardware, and smartphones. In my free time, I like…
This “normal” USB cable secretly wants to be a hacking tool
Imagine borrowing a charging cable and accidentally starting a cybersecurity audit

At first glance, it looks like a regular USB cable. But a new Kickstarter project called Hacknect is trying to turn something as ordinary as a charging cable into a surprisingly powerful hacking and automation device. The product is being pitched toward ethical hackers, cybersecurity researchers, developers, and automation enthusiasts. Hidden inside the cable is a tiny Wi-Fi-enabled computer powered by an ESP32-S3 chip, allowing it to do far more than simply charge a phone or transfer files.
According to the Kickstarter campaign, Hacknect can remotely execute scripts, automate tasks, emulate keyboard inputs, and even store hidden files through a built-in microSD card slot. Users can reportedly control the cable wirelessly through a browser dashboard or smartphone.
Apple Preview is the most underrated Mac app. Here are 7 things you didn’t know you could do with it.
Stop paying for apps that do less than what's already on your Mac.

Most Mac users see Apple Preview as only an app to view images, PDFs, and other documents. That's it. If that sounds like you, you are leaving a lot on the table, because Preview has quietly grown into one of the most capable apps on macOS, and it’s available for free.
I use the app daily to edit images, markup and sign PDFs, redact information, and so much more. So let me walk you through seven things you probably didn't know Apple Preview could handle.
Google, Meta and Microsoft are getting worker data from sneaky bossware tools, report says
Worker surveillance is becoming a data business

The remote work era made employee monitoring software easier to justify. What began as a way to watch people working from home is now being normalized on office floors, too. Right on cue, a new Northeastern University study suggests the data collected through these tools is also being shared with major third parties, including Google, Facebook, and Microsoft.
David Choffnes, a professor at Northeastern’s Khoury College of Computer Sciences and one of the study’s co-authors, said the research shows how little privacy protection workers have in the workplace. He also noted that the issue is not just data collection by employers, but the fact that this data is being shared outside the company.
Koichiko