This robot uses a reprogrammed Flashlight Cubelet to cause it to blink faster and faster as the sensor values it receives increase. Turn up the music; you’re ready to party with your very own strobe light robot! OK, ok. This robot might not be the life of the party on its own, but it’s an easy example to get started programming Cubelets.
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All posts by Jonathan Moyes
Here at Modular Robotics we’ve been working hard on an exciting new product that enables people to wirelessly control and reprogram their Cubelets. We’re getting ready to release that system to the world, but thought we’d give our friends in Boulder a sneak peek. So! We’re hosting a Hackathon to give you a chance to play with Cubelets and be the first to try out our new Bluetooth Cubelet.
If you’re in the area on October 4th, swing by our headquarters and join us for an evening of building robots, eating pizza, and maybe even winning a set of Cubelets! The programming is done with text-based C code, so it’s probably not for the young ones. 12+ is about right. We have limited space so please RSVP in the comments section below.
When:
October 4th, 2012, 6:00pm
Where:
Modular Robotics
3085 Bluff St. Boulder CO 80301
[As you head East on Bluff (from 30th), you’ll see our low brick building on your left. Pull into the parking lot behind (and just after) the building and you’ll see us.]
What to Bring:
A Windows laptop with a Bluetooth adapter, and/or an Android device.
As Space Shuttle Endeavor is transported to its retirement, my Facebook and Twitter feeds are flooded with comments and photos of its final flight. I can’t help but feel like this is, at some level, the end of an era. An era of big dreams and phenomenal achievements. An era of curiosity, exploration and discovery. It’s the end of an era of great things.
In my opinion, the Shuttle program is (symbolically, and perhaps physically) the single largest achievement humans have ever made. A highly reliable, mostly reusable machine that can transport and sustain human life outside our protective atmosphere, bringing with it complex scientific equipment, and the spirits of a nation.
What enabled its success? A passion for science, the desire for discovery, and the collaboration of thousands of individuals. Thousands of people working together in teams, collaborating to design and build each of the 1,000,000+ components that comprise one shuttle. Each of those parts must to do it’s job AND work perfectly with each of the other 999,999 parts.
This complexity and collaboration is the motivation behind Cubelets. Just one Cubelet doesn’t do anything useful, just as a single NASA design team couldn’t have built a Shuttle. But when you put a few Cubelets together, they spring to life. Working as a team, each of the members of the group accomplishes what none of them could accomplish individually, and amazing interactions result.
There’s one way to ensure that the end of one era is succeeded by great things in the next: by educating and encouraging kids to do great things. Children possess such amazing creative capabilities. Every group of students we’ve given a set of Cubelets to has combined them in a new way to make a different robot that is completely unique from anything we’ve seen before. It’s incredible!
Dream it and build it – just like NASA. Let’s inspire the next generation of dreamers!