I remember some "How it's made" videos where conveyor belts and automation were put to very good use in baking cookies, and such. I take it that this implementation is more artisanal?<p>edit: The gummies are special because they can potentially glow and deform in a unique way. Interactivity is possibly overstated in this case.
I'm gonna have to read up more on this one. I have a hard time grasping how this is possible:<p>> "Edible robots could be used to deliver food to endangered areas, to deliver medicines in innovative ways to people who have difficulty swallowing or to animals"<p>Given the main anecdote:<p>> "two completely edible robotic teddy bears...when air is injected through dedicated pathways, their heads and arms move."<p>Seems like there's a long way to go here.
> “Robotics and food are two separate worlds,” says Dario Floreano, head of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at EPFL and coordinator of the RoboFood project.<p>we should keep it that way