Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

hitchBOT meets his untimely end in the City of (Not) So Brotherly Love

Add as a preferred source on Google

Philadelphia has officially lost its right to its kind-hearted nickname. After a mere two weeks on the road, the hitchhiking robot who made headlines after successfully trekking across Canada has met his sad demise in the largest city in Pennsylvania. Apparently, the City of Brotherly Love is only loving to those of the human race — but robots not so much. hitchBot’s ambitious quest of making it across the country was abruptly cut short after the poor robot was beheaded and dismembered. As it turns out, Canadians really are friendlier than Americans — at least when it comes to cute, child-sized machines just trying to get a ride to the next town.

Canada's hitchhiking robot lasts just two weeks in US before getting decapitated. http://t.co/802FBRUMho #smh pic.twitter.com/0bJexW3igk

— Lauren O’Neil (@laurenonline) August 2, 2015

In an endearing post on the hitchBot website, the developers of the humanoid muse, “Oh dear, my body was damaged, but I live on back home and with all my friends. I guess sometimes bad things happen to good robots! My trip must come to an end for now, but my love for humans will never fade. Thank you to all my friends.”

Recommended Videos

Though the little bot did manage to make it across Boston, Salem, Gloucester, Marblehead, and New York City, the vandals of Pennsylvania prevented him from going any farther. The great minds behind the Canadian robot insisted that they were not interested in pressing charges against those responsible for the damage, and instead want to “focus on the question ‘what can be learned from this?’ and explore future adventures for robots and humans.”

Considering that hitchBot successfully made it across Canada in just 26 days, and also safely traversed portions of Europe, it’s a real shame that it’s time in the United States was so interrupted. Despite having “San Francisco of Bust” written across its forehead, the little machine didn’t quite realize its dreams, and its battery has yet to be located by the development team.

hitchBot, which took a photo every 20 minutes, relied entirely on the help of the curious and the kindness of strangers to move it from place to place, as it was incapable of moving independently. And for two years, this worked — all until that fateful evening in Philadelphia.

Still, hitchBot creators say, “We wish to remember the good times, and we encourage hitchBOT’s friends and fans to do the same.” So keep dreaming big, little robots. And one day you’ll go from sea to shining sea.

Lulu Chang
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
AI shouldn’t make decisions for you, but this one will tell when you’re making a bad one
Cornell researchers built an AI tool that checks your decisions against your own values.
Toy, Person, Rubix Cube

If you have ever stared at a long list of options and felt your brain just give up, you are not alone. Researchers at Cornell University get it, and they have built a tool called Interactive Explainable Ranking (IER) that steps in right at that moment, not to decide for you, but to quietly point out when your choices do not match the values you care about.

How does this tool actually work?

Read more
Ultra-thin transparent solar cells promise invisible charging for wearables, cars, and homes
Your car windows and smart glasses could one day harvest sunlight
Adult, Female, Person

A new kind of near-invisible solar cell could one day help everyday glass surfaces generate electricity. This could include car windows and sunroofs, smart glasses, wearables, building façades, and home windows.

Scientists at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, have developed ultrathin transparent perovskite solar cells that are about 10,000 times thinner than a strand of human hair and around 50 times thinner than conventional perovskite solar cells. The NTU research team, led by Associate Professor Annalisa Bruno, published the findings in ACS Energy Letters (via TechXplore).

Read more
Edge browser on mobile gets a huge upgrade that makes it a worthy pick over Chrome
Edge mobile gets smarter just before Chrome’s big Gemini moment
Microsoft Edge on a phone

Chrome is still the default browser for many smartphone users, but Microsoft’s latest Edge update gives them a practical reason to try something else.

Microsoft has announced a major Copilot update for Edge across desktop and mobile. The rollout comes ahead of Google’s Gemini-powered Chrome upgrade for Android, which is expected in June, giving Edge a chance to stand out on phones before Chrome’s next big AI push.

Read more