Look: It can solve Rubik’s cube before blinking the robot

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A Purdue University team has set a new Rubik’s cube-sighting record.

His robot, purdubiks cube, solved the puzzle in only 0.103 milliseconds.

The new record crosses Mitsubishi’s previous time from a two-year-old of one second.

A group of students in Purdue University, Indiana, USA have broken the previous Guinness World Record Once to solve a rubic cube organized by Mitsubishi, a Japanese group of about 80 billion dollars. The high-speed robot is called the Purdubik Cube, which managed to solve the puzzle cube in a blink-it-u-u-mise-it 0.103 milliseconds.

Matthew Patroy, the head of the project, was inspired by the previous record holder and wanted to make his effort on the record. After collecting his friends, Junpai Ota, Aden Hurd and Alex Barta, the team defeated Mitsubishi’s record with a second of one second, according to it Perdue university,

“To keep it in perspective, the human nap is 200 to 300 milliseconds. So we are much faster than that. The time of human response is about .200 milliseconds, so we are even more faster than that,” said Mr. Patorhe.

Talking about the challenges in developing the machine, the researchers said they have to re -design the cube so that it could face the tremendous force required to solve it within the milcecond.

“Cubes themselves become disintegrated,” said Mr. Patrohe. “The pieces in themselves nap in half and separate.”

Social media reacts

The video of the machine in the machine has gone viral on social media, which invites surprised reactions from users, which cannot believe that the cube was resolved in an eye.

A user said, “Wow. I really blown up and remembered it for the first time. Gone absolutely mad.”

One third remarked: “It is even more impressive for me that they created a cube, which can be resolved quickly without disintegrating.”

The Rapid machine was first unveiled in the student design competition of Spark, Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) of Purdue, where it was first in the house in December 2024. The team continued to build on success by carrying forward the limits of automation and high speed computing.

The achievement is made more remarkable than the fact that the cube of Purdubik is highly comfortable and interactive. Using a Bluetooth-competent “smart cube”, users can scramble the puzzle in real time, and the robot reflects every trick, the scramble is complete after solving the cube immediately.