Engineers design “tree-on-a-chip”

MIT News, a Web site run by the MIT News Office, offers RSS feeds for syndication purposes. All MIT News stories republished on third-party sites must include:
At the top of the story: the headline, sub-headline, author's byline, and a citation of "MIT News" that links to the original story on the MIT News site;
At the bottom of the story: the words "Reprinted with permission of MIT News" and a link to the MIT News homepage (http://news.mit.edu/);
Additionally, sites wishing to use accompanying multimedia content (photos, video) may do so, provided the creator is cited in the MIT News caption. If no creator is cited, the multimedia content is not available for use. For usage inquiries, please contact Press Inquiries.
 
MIT News, a Web site run by the MIT News Office, offers RSS feeds for syndication purposes. All MIT News stories republished on third-party sites must include:
At the top of the story: the headline, sub-headline, author's byline, and a citation of "MIT News" that links to the original story on the MIT News site;
At the bottom of the story: the words "Reprinted with permission of MIT News" and a link to the MIT News homepage (http://news.mit.edu/);
Additionally, sites wishing to use accompanying multimedia content (photos, video) may do so, provided the creator is cited in the MIT News caption. If no creator is cited, the multimedia content is not available for use. For usage inquiries, please contact Press Inquiries.

Dafuq are you on about?

https://mybroadband.co.za/news/science/203552-engineers-design-tree-on-a-chip.html
 
But where do you use it? We can use large robots, we can use nanobots, but small robots have so far been a novelty only.
 
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