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US inventors build robot able to solve Rubik’s Cube in 0.38 seconds

The time beats the Guinness World Record of 0.637 seconds set in 2017.

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The fastest official time for a human to solve a Rubik’s Cube is 4.69 seconds (Neil Kendall/Getty Images/PA)

A pair of inventors from the US have built a robotic machine that can solve a Rubik’s Cube in 0.38 seconds.

Ben Katz and Jared Di Carlo’s solver smashed the current world record of 0.637 seconds, set by Albert Beer’s robot Sub1 Reloaded and verified by Guinness World Records in 2017.

For reference, the fastest official time for a human to solve a Rubik’s Cube is 4.69 seconds, set by 15-year-old American Patrick Ponce last year, and Katz says the robot could go even faster.

“For the time being, Jared and I have both lost interest in playing the tuning game,” Katz, a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, wrote on his blog.

“But we might come back to it eventually and shave off another 100 milliseconds or so.”

The machine was made using six motors and motor drivers and Playstation Eye cameras – the cameras once used for gaming on the old Playstation 3 console.

The cameras keep track of the configuration of the cube, with the motors creating the movement, which did hit a few snags – in the form of obliterated Rubik’s Cubes – in the creation process.

“We noticed that all of the fast Rubik’s Cube solvers were using stepper motors, and thought that we could do better if we used better motors,” Di Carlo wrote in his blog.

“So we did.

“Our solve time of 0.38 seconds includes acquiring the image from the webcam, detecting colours, finding a solution, and actually rotating the faces of the cube.”

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