*Meet 26-year-old Nigeria entrepreneur Silas Adekunle, who is currently the highest paid robotics engineer in the world! After graduating from the University of the West of England, he founded Reach ...
Nigerian-born Englishman Silas Adekunle has raised more than $7 million to fund an innovative gaming robot that can be used, in part, to enhance science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) ...
Silas Adekunle, a Nigerian-British entrepreneur, will be selling his company’s gaming robots at Apple stores, according to Black Enterprise. His UK-based Reach Robotics company spent four year ...
MekaMon is a real-life robot battler. Players use a mobile app on their iOS or Android devices to control a physical machine that looks something like a tiny Protoss Dragoon from Starcraft. An ...
After years of research and development, Reach Robotics has closed a $7.5 million Series A, co-led by Korea Investment Partners (KiP) and IGlobe, to bring its augmented reality bots to market in a big ...
In the opening scene of Disney’s Big Hero 6, robot builders pit their high-tech creations against each other in a back alley bot fight. Reach Robotics founder Silas Adekunle is bringing that scene to ...
Silas Adekunle was born in Nigeria and moved to the UK at about 11 years old. He spent much of his childhood obsessed with science and technology, playing with Lego robot kits and watching YouTube ...
What began as a side project at a college robotics club is now a boxed gaming experience available worldwide. After nearly four years in development, the Bristol, England-based Reach Robotics is ...
Reach Robotics, an augmented reality gaming company that creates robots for both fun and STEM education, announced on Wednesday that it just made an exclusive deal with Apple to sell its line of ...
Your living room is the next battleground. Reach Robotics is launching its MekaMon augmented reality gaming robots today. The Bristol, United Kingdom-based company has created app-driven robots that ...
So long, MekaMon. Reach Robotics, the company behind the customizable and kid-friendly spider robots, is closing its doors. In a LinkedIn blog post, co-founder and chief executive Silas Adekunle said ...
This article was taken from the May 2015 issue of WIRED magazine. Be the first to read WIRED's articles in print before they're posted online, and get your hands on loads of additional content by ...
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