"Best Buy has the absolute worst customer I have ever encountered. The mere fact that you cannot call the store where you purchased your item, is outrageous. We purchased what was recommended, and it doesn't work. Can we call and speak with ANYONE state side, nope. Worst, buyer beware!!!"
Target
3
37
55 Graceland Blvd, Columbus
CLOSE · 07:00 - 22:00 · +1 614-781-1978
"Store is disorderly. Never anything new or interesting. Only 1 checkout lane with long lines for self check out."
Target
3
82
1717 Olentangy River Rd, Columbus
CLOSE · 07:00 - 23:59 · +1 614-298-1070
"It's the OSU Campus Target. Not the l\none on Hogh Street, this is the "bigger" one.\nSo, it can be quite busy and hectic but offers all the selections you might expect at a bigger target\nstore.\n\nThis location serves the entire Tri-village, Upper\nArlington & Grandview Heights areas,\nas well as the OSU/Short North/Victorian Village communities. Lots of people and a very busy parking lot.\n\nOfferings include pre-order purchase curbside pick up."
Best Buy
2
102
1375 Polaris Pkwy, Columbus
CLOSE · 10:00 - 22:00 · +1 614-430-0789
"Placed an order on september the first to be delivered on the seventh between 13:45 and 16:45 for a fifty five inch tv and a soundbar, The time came and went with no call and no show. Driver finally calls at eight fifteen, says they're picking up the soundbar at the at the store. I told them at that point we need to reschedule. I called and talked to customer service, and they said, I would have to call on Sunday. So I did, then they told me, I'd have to wait 24 to 48 hours for them to process it. Here it is monday at twelve noon and still have not received a call back to schedule the new delivery and they've got my money. That has got to be the dumbest ass procedure, i've ever heard about you never make customer wait. And when you screw up that customer should get top priority to get it fixed. I wouldn't trust best lie if they were in church praying. Unfortunately yelp will not allow up me to give them zero stars when they truly deserve negative numbers."
A vision-based control system called Neural Jacobian Fields enables soft and rigid robots to learn self-supervised motion control using only a monocular camera. The system, developed by MIT CSAIL researchers, combines 3D scene reconstruction with embodied representation and closed-loop control.
Robot, know thyself: New vision-based system teaches machines to understand their bodies Neural Jacobian Fields, developed by MIT CSAIL researchers, can learn to control any robot from a single camera, without any other sensors.
MIT researchers developed a powerful system that could help robots safely navigate unpredictable environments using only images captured from their onboard cameras.
Founded by MIT alumni, the Pickle Robot Company has developed robots that can autonomously load and unload trucks inside warehouses and logistic centers.
A hopping, insect-sized robot can jump over gaps or obstacles, traverse rough, slippery, or slanted surfaces, and perform aerial acrobatic maneuvers, while using a fraction of the energy required for flying microbots.
A new system enables a robot to “think ahead” and consider thousands of potential motion plans simultaneously, allowing the robot to solve a multistep problem in a few seconds.
New insect-scale microrobots can fly more than 100 times longer than previous versions. The new bots, also significantly faster and more agile, could someday be used to pollinate fruits and vegetables.
The robot can support the person’s full weight, lifting them from sitting to standing and vice versa along a natural trajectory. And the arms of the robot can catch them by rapidly inflating side airbags if they begin to fall.
SPROUT is a flexible robot built by MIT Lincoln Laboratory and Notre Dame researchers to assist in disaster response. Emergency responders can use the robot to navigate and map areas under rubble to plan rescue operations.
The word “robot” was coined by the Czech writer Karel Čapek in a 1920 play called Rossum’s Universal Robots, and is derived from the Czech robota, meaning “drudgery” or “servitude”.