View allAll Photos Tagged Robotics
Here's a plush type Robot I made for my 2yr old
Blogged: thephantommoon.typepad.com/phantom_moon/2009/07/robot-lov...
In Hove museum. At the excellent exhibition of old toy robots and related toys and artworks in Hove museum.
Taken with Panasonic 20mm f1.7 lens on Panasonic G1.
Ülkemizdeki artan genç nüfusumuz başta robot ve bilişim teknolojileri olmak üzere çeşitli bilim dallarına ilgi duyuyorlar. Websitemizin amacı ise bu gençlerin gerçekleştirmek istedikleri proje ler için kaynak olabilmek. Çeşitli bilim dallarında pek çok hali hazırda uygulanabilir projeler sitemizde mevcut olduğu gibi dilerseniz sizlerde paylaşım ekibimize katılabilirsiniz. Gelecek nesillerimiz için çabalıyoruz !
ROBOT ACTION SUPER! I love the "engrish" stuff, such as that found on www.engrish.com and I love to find peculiar packages at flea markets and dollar stores that have hillariously inaccurate translations along with eye-popping graphics. This is not quite the same, but finds its inspiration there.
* Retooled neck for a wider range of movement (the original one could only look side to side, now he can look downwards and tilt his head side to side for cool poses)
* The blue painted plastic windows were replaced by transluscent plastic (for a glass looking effect)
* Elbows were retooled to allow a 90° position, which was imposible before.
* I added a custom bumper.
* Some parts of his chest were resculpted, for more accuracy.
Ülkemizdeki artan genç nüfusumuz başta robot ve bilişim teknolojileri olmak üzere çeşitli bilim dallarına ilgi duyuyorlar. Websitemizin amacı ise bu gençlerin gerçekleştirmek istedikleri proje ler için kaynak olabilmek. Çeşitli bilim dallarında pek çok hali hazırda uygulanabilir projeler sitemizde mevcut olduğu gibi dilerseniz sizlerde paylaşım ekibimize katılabilirsiniz. Gelecek nesillerimiz için çabalıyoruz !
We are teaching a new maker art class called ‘Robot World’, to help 4th and 5th graders create their own artistic robot. This after-school class is taking place in fall 2017 at the Lycée Français in Sausalito. Students are learning how to make their bots move in a variety of ways, as well as play sounds and light up, using a programmable Arduino board.
This photo set covers the first half of our 12-part course, when students get to build their robots. Each student received their own robot kit, which they learned to assemble, control and program. They first built a chassis, then wired up the electronics, assembled a remote control, then added a head and arms, with servo motors to make them move.
We then laser cut wooden figures and body parts based on their designs, which included a police bot, a swat bot, a devil bot and a chef bot. Once their bots are designed and assembled, they will learn how to program them and make them move in different ways, then decorate them, give them a story, and present a robot show to their friends and families in December.
For this course, my partner Edward Janne and I created our own robot kit, using an Arduino Feather M0 for the robot, an RF remote, a custom chassis, plus three additional servos and more parts. Our robot kit is similar to commercial products, but with a lot more features, at a lower cost. It was a lot of work, but we’re very happy with the final results, and our students seemed to really enjoy the class. We hope this will encourage other teachers, students and makers to create their own animated characters, for art and technology’s sake.
View more photos of our ‘Robot World’ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687758927575
View photos of our ‘Create a Robot‘ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687842857094
Read our online student guide to learn how to create your own robot:
Learn about our ‘Robot World’ class for children at the Lycee:
fabriceflorin.com/2017/08/18/robot-world/
Learn about our ‘Create a Robot’ class for adults at Tam Makers:
www.tammakers.org/create-a-robot/
Learn about our Maker Art classes:
fabriceflorin.com//teaching-maker-art/
Learn about Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley:
#arduino #robots #makers #makerart #makered
We are teaching a new maker art class called ‘Robot World’, to help children create their own artistic robots. This class for grades 4-5 will take place at the Lycée Français in Sausalito. Students will learn how to make their bots move in a variety of ways, as well as play sounds and light up, using a programmable Arduino board. They will then decorate their animated creatures, give them a story, and create a magical world for them to live in.
This photo set covers our our first prototypes for this class, featuring a Baby Angel, an Alien and a Bamboodu native american spirit, in different stages of construction. Students will design their own characters, and we will laser cut wooden figures based on their designs, using the same mechanisms to make characters shake their heads and wave their arms while they roam.
Each student will receive a robot kit, which they will learn to assemble, control and program. They will then take their completed robot home with them, after the class ends. For this course, my partner Edward Janne and I have created our own robot kit, using an Arduino Feather M0 for the robot, an RF remote, a custom chassis, plus three additional servos and more parts. Our robot kit is similar to commercial products, but with a lot more features at a lower cost.
We are also teaching a similar class for adults and teens at Tam Makers in Mill Valley, which will use the same robot kit. In just two evenings in late September, we'll show students how to build their own robot with Arduino, make it move, light up and play sounds -- then take it home.
View more photos of our ‘Robot World’ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687758927575
Learn more about our ‘Robot World’ class at the Lycee:
fabriceflorin.com/2017/08/18/robot-world/
Learn more about our Maker Art classes:
fabriceflorin.com//teaching-maker-art/
Learn more about our ‘Create a Robot’ class for adults at Tam Makers:
www.tammakers.org/create-a-robot/
Learn more about Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley:
#arduino #robots #makers #makerart #makered
Robot
Les aventures d'un petit robot créé spontanément. Les photos sont réalisées avec un Hasselblad 500 C/M.
Robot Junior - Adox 50 - Rodinal 1:100
not much to say really, this guy ran past me so I shot him too!
Suspended Animation Classic #100
Originally published Nov. 25, 1990 (#47)
Magnus Robot Fighter
By R. A. Jones
The times, they are a changing.
One of the most fondly remembered comic book series of the 1960s was “Magnus, Robot Fighter”. Set in the year 4000 A.D., the series centered on the heroic adventures of a young man named Magnus, who had been trained to shatter steel with his bare hands.
Magnus lived in a near-Utopian world in which sophisticated robots performed most physical labor – leaving mankind free to follow other pursuits. Occasionally, however, a robot would malfunction or fall under the control of evil men. When that happened, Magnus was called upon to stop them.
The book was a straight-forward action series, the stories fairly simple and unremarkable. What made them memorable was the clean, beautiful artwork of Russ Manning.
“Magnus, Robot Fighter” has been resurrected by Valiant Comics, and clearly shows how our sensibilities have changed in 25 years. The basic premise remains the same, but the slant of the stories is different.
Magnus now questions his right to destroy robots that are capable of independent thought, for he worries they may actually be living beings. So far, the series asks us to ponder the very nature of life.
Scripter Jim Shooter, who’s been writing comics since he was 13, has given us a new series that is proving to be superior to the old. It is a solid science-fiction tale that works very well.
It would be extremely difficult to match the level of artistic excellence achieved in the original series, and here the new book falls a little short – but only a little. Art Nichols and Bob Layton come close, and close is good enough. Combined with the quality of the paper and the coloring, it makes for an attractive package.
“Magnus, Robot Fighter” sells for $1.75 and is available in comic book specialty stores.
More than 50 tweens, teens, children and adults got hands on with robots Saturday, July 16, 2016, at the Marysville Library at Robot Rally. The event offered Ozobots, LEGO Mindstorm Robotics, Lakewood High School's Full-Metal Robotics, and WSU at Everett's Engineering Club, which took second place at the the University Rover Challenge at the Mars Desert Research Station in Hanksville, Utah.
More than 50 tweens, teens, children and adults got hands on with robots Saturday, July 16, 2016, at the Marysville Library at Robot Rally. The event offered Ozobots, LEGO Mindstorm Robotics, Lakewood High School's Full-Metal Robotics, and WSU at Everett's Engineering Club, which took second place at the the University Rover Challenge at the Mars Desert Research Station in Hanksville, Utah.
The robot at rest, after a long day of construction. TJ picked up a pair of ultrasonic sensor units during a trip to Fry's, so they're probably the first sensor inputs that we'll use after the drive control circuit is wired up to the onboard computer. There's also a Sensaphone ISACC SCADA board, which will form the basis for other sensor I/O waiting in the wings to be installed.
El Tigre Robot Dragon Gigante
Lucas Mercado
Nico Ozuna
Mario Scorzelli
Martin Osuna
Chez Vautier Galeria
uspallata 2181 primero A
Buenos Aires, Argentina
El Sábado, 12 de diciembre de 2009 a las 18:20
Hora de finalización:
El Sábado, 19 de diciembre de 2009 a las 21:20
Buenos Aires, Argentina
São Paulo (SP) 08.03.2022 - 9º Congresso Brasileiro de Inovação da Indústria - Robótica
Alunos do SESI participam de simulado de preparação para o Torneio de Robótica FTC, no esquenta do Congresso de Inovação
Foto: Victor Andrade/CNI
Started to build a severed robot head. I plan on adding all of the old sci-fi classics, blinking eyes, robotic voice, spinning antennas.
Based off a painting by illustrator Chris Bishop (Broken Robot #4 (Yellow)).
We are teaching a new maker art class called ‘Robot World’, to help children create their own artistic robots. This class for grades 4-5 will take place at the Lycée Français in Sausalito. Students will learn how to make their bots move in a variety of ways, as well as play sounds and light up, using a programmable Arduino board. They will then decorate their animated creatures, give them a story, and create a magical world for them to live in.
This photo set covers our our first prototypes for this class, featuring a Baby Angel, an Alien and a Bamboodu native american spirit, in different stages of construction. Students will design their own characters, and we will laser cut wooden figures based on their designs, using the same mechanisms to make characters shake their heads and wave their arms while they roam.
Each student will receive a robot kit, which they will learn to assemble, control and program. They will then take their completed robot home with them, after the class ends. For this course, my partner Edward Janne and I have created our own robot kit, using an Arduino Feather M0 for the robot, an RF remote, a custom chassis, plus three additional servos and more parts. Our robot kit is similar to commercial products, but with a lot more features at a lower cost.
We are also teaching a similar class for adults and teens at Tam Makers in Mill Valley, which will use the same robot kit. In just two evenings in late September, we'll show students how to build their own robot with Arduino, make it move, light up and play sounds -- then take it home.
View more photos of our ‘Robot World’ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687758927575
Learn more about our ‘Robot World’ class at the Lycee:
fabriceflorin.com/2017/08/18/robot-world/
Learn more about our Maker Art classes:
fabriceflorin.com//teaching-maker-art/
Learn more about our ‘Create a Robot’ class for adults at Tam Makers:
www.tammakers.org/create-a-robot/
Learn more about Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley:
#arduino #robots #makers #makerart #makered
Robot Junior, Tele-Xenart 150mm, Kodak Tri X, Diafine (shot at about 1000iso)
www.cloudyimages.co.uk/blog/shooting-with-the-blunderbuss...