Working in collaboration with the company Nature Perspectives, Jack chose the specimens to bring back to life, including dodo and whale skeletons, a taxidermied red panda and a preserved cockroach.
The Mauritius dodo, a bird last seen in the 17th century, is once again "speaking" at the Cambridge Museum of Zoology, thanks to AI technology. Despite being extinct by the 1680s, visitors can now ...
The world-famous Blaschka Glass Flowers receive a lot of attention at this museum – and rightly so ... specimens from the Museum of Comparative Zoology, the Harvard University Herbaria ...
The University of Cambridge's Museum of Zoology is launching an innovative AI-powered experience that allows visitors to interact with animal specimens starting from Tuesday. The AI system enables ...
The University of Cambridge's Museum of Zoology, external has chosen 13 specimens for the conversations, including the extinct flightless bird the dodo, narwhal and blue fin whale skeletons ...
Chugging deep into the estate woodland at Audley End, the Hallowe’en Express takes passengers to a spooky grotto. Little ones ...
will be granted the gift of conversation on Tuesday for a month-long project at Cambridge University’s Museum of Zoology. Equipped with personalities and accents, the dead creatures and models can ...
People can talk to a dodo - thanks to artificial intelligence. Visitors to the University of Cambridge’s Museum of Zoology ...
CAMBRIDGE is a magical city with so much to offer its visitors. Its streets are bursting with history and make you feel like you’ve stepped straight into a Harry Potter film, even if none ...