Lego Mindstorms In Space
ribbiting writes: "A father-son team have won the "Ultimate Builder Competition" (Lego Mindstorms) with their entry named "Jitter". The robot will fly to the ISS in November. It fits (whole) into a approx. 1'x1'x1' box and weighs less than 3 lbs. It's main mission is to collect small, flying debris. It can interact with the station walls and crew and supposedly has some light "mischief" programmed in as well (sneaking up on people, dancing). The story can be found here, de.news.yahoo.com, it's in German (sorry)." We mentioned the contest a few months ago. Altavista gives a semi-readable machine translation.
Is "Sneaking up on people" such a good idea in something as stressful as a space station?
I give it two months before an astronaut "accidentally" blasts it out an airlock...
Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
No Homer! You'll clog the INSTRUMENTS!
Now if they could mod that robot so it would fetch a beer on voice command, that would be sweet.
That's Mr. Eradicator to you.
trance-port
The plural of Lego is Lego, not Legos.
It might be interesting to have this type of device do some mundane house keeping tasks. Another possibility is a mobile alarm clock that looks for people if it has not been turned off, and wakes them up.
I am me...I think
the Megamaid out of Lego mindstorm kits. You could probably do it too.
My cat is named Mischief. She isn't light; she is a chunk.
Or is that a DMCA violation? :-)
"Pinky, you've left the lens cap of your mind on again." - P&TB
"I can see my house from here!" - ST:
The word means "I'm reading" in Latin, i's related to the English word legible, the Greek word LOGOS "writing" and has little to do with building locks.
I can see it now..
"Open the pod bay doors Jitter."
Did anyone understand the part about "It moves primarily through a cam in a cage. On contact with the wall, it applies through moving disc cam in cage, to the opposite axis"
I understand that this says basically that it moves away from walls when it contacts them, but I can't figure out for the life of me what a "disc cam in cage" is, or how this would help it push off of the wall?
I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
You mean small flying debris, like loose 1x3 Lego Blocks?
Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known. -- Carl Sagan
Slit their throats. Rape their women. Feed their children to pigs. Bulldoze their Mosques. Nuke their countries. Miller Time.
All right, this *is* cool. Although now I'm faced with a somewhat difficult problem... those danged Legos are so lightweight, my erector set components are just too outdated to fly into space
Oh well, I suppose my Super-Erector-TVStationChaging-FloorSweeping-Bath
It fits (whole) into a approx. 1'x1'x1' box and weighs less than 3 lbs.
Won't it weigh 0 lb in space? Surely you meant to give its mass in slugs.
I can see the implications already. If this was in a movie (cough, cough, red planet, hmpgh) it would be accidently bumped into "military mode" at some point in the mission. I'd at least run all programs on the bot through a disassembler before letting it come with me to space.
Free unix account: freeshell.org
ok yes many a geek has fond memories of playing with legos...
But guess what we're all grown up now and really don't care that much.
Or is it lego is paying for peices to be posted?
Sorry but Lego and GPSes are fucking BORING.
Stick to stuff that matters, not stuff that matters 20 years ago when i was a little kid, or stuff that was middly nifty for 10 minutes but now is fucking boring.
Slashdot, News about LEGO, Stuff on GPSes...
"Dimitri, I need a 1 x 6 block. Nyet, a block, not plank!"
[pink beam of light]
And to think that Halloween is just around the corner. If you have enough of them, do they try to "collect" larger floating particles [smile]?
Side Note, Intertran is also decent as an online translator.
and here's a nice list of various robot competitions
"It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
Okay, what's a valid referrer? I tried going to babelfish.altavista.com, then the mentinoed link, and it still didn't like it.
It seems to me that even mentioning babelfish is redundant these days. The people who don't know it exist tend not to be the slashdot type. But maybe I'm just being an elitist.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
all your quaeda are belong to us !!!
If you have trouble with Alta Vista's translation, or just want an alternative translation, you might also try Google's Translation.
Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
(teCHANNEL.DE) Konrad and Bastian black brook won the " Ultimate builder Competition " with its model " jitter " from Lego Mindstorms.
The small robot from Lego parts and technology will fly in November to the space station IIS. Of 124 participants in the competition with the slogan " Lego Mindstorms the last ten met goes space " to the final in Munich. In presence of jury protector and astronaut Ulf Merbold were explained to father and son black brook as the winner. The winner model jitter is in EATS flying around parts to in-collect, at least is programmed it apart from other functions for it. Special prices went to the muscle coach for astronaut the one sechskoepfiges team out of Austria/Germany and Switzerland built.
With jitters the crew gets an aid to the hand, which, if it in weightlessness works satisfactorily, freely in-collects flying
particles in the space station. In addition communicate jitter with tones and light signal on its finds or contacts with the cab wall. Jitter is based on the salesusual Lego Mindstorm parts. Hitachi H8 micro CONTROLLER, programmable chips, which are likewise standard, form the heart. Progarmmiert became jitter of Konrad black brook in Java (TinyVM). If jitter is switched on in the IIS under weightlessness, it must be brought into a calm orientation situation.
The Z-axis should show thereby direction passenger lighting, one permanent guideline assistance of jitters. Afterwards the robot turns
some 360 degrees of roles around its control parameters to initialize and can with easy thrust in travel be brought. Jitter works with impulse drive. But permanently a cam disk in a cage is propelled. With contact with the external wall the cage shifts. Depending upon impact direction such an impulse is produced into the opposite
direction. Otherwise is the robot with light -, contact and rotation sensors equipped it on its course to lead and steer are. Jitter task
it is to be in-collected flying around parts, which it sweeps with a broom from Lego hoses into a chamber in its korpus. If jitter pushes
against a wall, the chamber closes automatically, so that the past charge is not again scattered. Jitter reacted in addition over the contact sensors on caper flaxnesses and flips and is programmed, about on all kinds of nonsense Anschleichen and frightening, dancing and
continuous rotating. In addition it reacts to sign movements, which it evaluates with its infrared sensors.
One of the tasks for the Mindstorm technical designers was it to accommodate their robots into a crate of 30x30x30 centimeter. Jitter can be transported, which did not succeed to all models, therein in a piece. In addition the models may not be heavier than 1400 gram. For Bastian black brook, which had taken over the mechanical construction, was that the most difficult task. It has jitters taken and again (differently) assembled that it in the meantime know each part in the sleep, said so often apart it during the award of the prize in Siemens (Frankfurt: 723610.F, message) - forum Munich. The two Tueftler live in the control center in Moscow will see the start of their robot to the acid test in the universe (uba)
Collects random lego bricks and then builds another 'Jitter' from the parts!
GPL Deconstructed
"Why do they hate us?"
Because you're a karma whore.
... to fly around the house and pick up all those little Lego(s)left lying around on the floor, the ones she's always stepping on in the dark when checking on the kids at night.
I wonder if all the bricks for Jitter will need to be glued together to keep him from 'accidentally' coming apart?
It seems there is nothing credible in this report... And who is michael anyway?
>
In the New York Times today there is an article about a guy who built a robot out of Lego which can solve the Rubik's Cube.
It uses a lego-cam linked to a computer with color recognition software and a rubiks solving program, but all the mechanical bits to physically manipulate the cube are Lego.
Stumped by Rubik's Cube? Let the Lego Robot Solve It
"The two Tueftler live in the control center in Moscow will see the start of their robot to the acid test in the universe (uba)"
An excellent translation.
If I was going to take something fun into space, it would be one of those battery-powered traveller fans -- just the thing for flying around the inside of Alpha or the shuttle. (Outside it would be rather pointless, of course. :^) Could be useful for collecting loose potato chips too!
Reversing the battery will change the fan from a pusher into a puller prop.
One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
"IIS"? Am I the only one wondering what son of Nimda will do to this thing? Should I be buying space station repellent?
668: Neighbour of the Beast
But this is crazy! I thought the Canadarm had a few more years of useful life left.
Hmmm... Lego-based IIS components wouldn't be a bad way to go, I think. Just fire up a case of pieces and have the crew build whatever they need!
I once made a Lego turd. It didn't lool quite right tho.
otNay asyay oodgay asyay ayay igpay atinlay irstfay ostpay ouldway ebay.
Puh! +im3 2 g0!
I assume they'll glue it together before sending it up. At least that will avoid the self-modifying trojan LEGO monster issue...
222222222222dgskl;ewp-3ttjglfd;jlgsd-=''oqwp[upojk l;sajf,mn.vaio;u8rpoetu89043wqu8;ojask.jfdkl;ajio; er58p4u5890[w]=-`ioj'fjasl;fjioepwhriohoi~~jiowtio pu8tpu849p3jwef;nmdsnfsk;lhj;ewhtoipewhrt-wehjkt;h jk;lsfdp489yuthu;huip1`hpoiuhlshdkjflhwoiuerhpoiua fshpsd-gda;lhjklrhtuiew9t0py452hoihkjsafl;hjoiwqhu re38295-yewiofhsudaifohuwiaoehroiuaehflkjsahui2h3u 4huipfhslkjahjuoiewqhroihsfuioahtuilhjlkhjklnm,vzx m,.hautshyupi.nm,z.xcnm,.nczxlkv;hjaoispuoipt]raid t\ajfkl;asj;sanv,m.zxnvjklasdhfuiayupiy*(^#&*LDSGF KLHSLKJDFHU*ET^#@R*&O#YLKDSHLKFDSJMNXMCZ>HKDF_+ U*EW(Y*:HSFHD:DS|DSFJKSD::HSDHJKL:DSHFLS
Just to be safe, in case the robot gets out of hand, I think we should ship Sigourney Weaver up there with it.
I wonder how well it will all hold together during the launch.
Half of the crap I build in lego falls apart when I bring it anywhere to show someone. I can't imaging making something that would withstand the rumbling/g-forces etc. of take-off.
Are there pictures of it anywhere? I can't imagine what this thing looks like.
-- Have you ever noticed that at trade shows, Microsoft is always the company that is handing out stress balls?
It can interact with the station walls and crew and supposedly has some light "mischief" programmed in as well (sneaking up on people, dancing).
Can you imagine a Beowulf cluster of...
Oh, nevermind...
-Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
problems. Wonder if the cam flinging bot will 1, hold itself together without having to be glued, and 2, the net affect on the orbiting controls. My guess on 2 will be yes much less annoying that large mass astronauts banging around, and on 1, well can't wait to see if this bot will be able to pick up pieces of itself.
Of 124 participants in the competition also the slogan "Lego Mindstorms the last ten met goes space" to the final in Munich.
all your base are belong to us?
"We will adapt, Resistance is Futile..."
If I can't see it in Lynx I'm not interested.
Nothing for 6-digit uids?
From the Google translation:
Jitter works with impulse drive.
Oh, that's right. Zefram Cochrane isn't (wasn't? won't be?) German...
You can suck on my 25.4 cm cock at 128.7 km/h, until you extract exactly 1.89 litres from my two 2.27 kg balls. Then i will shove a 1.22 meter salami up your cavernous 1311 cm^3 ass. The friction might generate up to 54.4 degrees C of heat, so you should have a few ml of vaseline ready. It'll hurt, so you'll probably run around for a few meters and scream like a little girl, fortunately though we'll be doing this in a few hectares (hectometer^2) of woods.
I can just imagine astronauts desperate for fun being forced to cannabalize the thing.
The robot will fly to the ISS in November. It fits (whole) into a approx. 1'x1'x1' box and weighs less than 3 lbs.
Wow. These guys could sure cut some costs at nasa. Nasa can't fly to the ISS without rockets as tall as buildings, weighing tonnes, and costing billions!
*rimshot*
Send lawyers, guns, and money!
"Otherwise is the robot with light -, contact and rotation sensors equipped it on its course to lead and steer are." Sounds like something Yoda would say.
"I'm not impatient. I just hate waiting." - My Dad
It's not perfect, but I do a far better job then Babelfish or Google. Still not quite sure what "impulseantrieb" means though. We'll go with "momentum drive." Some of the words that I wasn't sure of I've enclosed in ?question marks?.
Lego Robot "Jitter" Sweeps in the IIS Space Station
Konrad and Bastian Schwarzenbach have won the "Ultimate Builder Competition" from Lego Mindstorms with their model "Jitter." The small robot, made from Lego and Technic pieces will fly to the IIS Space Station in November.
Out of 124 participants in the "Lego Mindstorms goes Space" contest, the last ten met in Munich for the finals. In the presence of Jury Schirmherr and Astronaut Ulf Merbold, father and son were declared the winners. The winning model Jitter will gather pieces that are flying around in the IIS--at least it's programmed to do that along with other functions. A special prize went to the astronaut muscle trainer that a six-person team from Austria, Germany, and Switzerland had built.
With Jitter the crew will get a helper at hand that, if it keeps itself safe in weightlessness, gathers pieces floating around the space station. In addition, Jitter communicates its findings or contact with a cabin wall through tones and light signals. Jitter is based on the commercially available Lego Mindstorm pieces. Hitachi H8 Microcontrollers, which are off-the-shelf programmable chips, constitute the heart of the robot.
Jitter was programmed in Java (TinyVM) by Konrad Schwarzenback
When Jitter is turned on in zero gravity on the IIS, it must be brought to rest with the Z-axis pointing towards the Cabin lighting, which serves as a permanent guidance point. The robot will then perform a few 360 degree rolls to initialize its steering parameters, and can be brought on-line with a light push.
[The following paragraph is the most techical and worst translated. Sorry.]
Jitter works with a momentum drive. A cam disc ?rotates? permanently inside the robot's housing. When it comes in contact with a wall, the housing gets displaced. According to the direction of the collision, an impulse in the opposite direction is generated.
In addition, the robot is outfitted with light, touch, and rotation sensors that turn it and guide it on its course. Jitters mission is to gather floating pieces with a broom made of Lego-tubes and sweep them into its body. When Jitter hits a wall, the compartment closes automatically, so that the gathered pieces aren't scattered all over again. Jitter also reacts through the touch sensors to petting and patting and is programmed for all sorts of nonsense such as sneaking up and scaring someone, dancing, and prolonged rotations. In addition it reacts to ?wink motions? that it picks up with it's infrared sensors.
One of the tasks for the Mindstorm builders was to fit their robot in a 30x30x30 centimeter box. Jitter, in contrast to some of the entries, can be transported in the box in one piece. In addition the models could be no heavier than 1400 grams. For Bastian Schwarzenbach, who undertook the mechanical construction, this was the hardest task. He took Jitter apart and rebuilt it (differently) so many times, that by now he knows every piece by heart, he said during the prize presentation at Siemen's Munich ?Forum?. Both of the hobbyists will get to watch the start of their robot live in the Moscow control center.
BabelFish Error 3012
We're sorry we've encountered an error with your request
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The error encountered is:
Not a valid referer.
Prospecting Stinks. Stop Wasting Time on Cold Calling.
Et voila: EATS
Even this one is wrong! More precisely it would have been EAT!!
Anyway very funny.
There's something a bit scary about this thing hunting relentlessly around for raw materials that it could easily use to enlarge itself.
I give it an escape and 3 years till it's the size of the moon.
if it "interacts" with the walls, does that not mean it could accidentally (or maybe not...) press the "self destruct" or "open door" button?
Anyone have any pictures of this robot?
Since it collects small flying objects.
Will it fetch beer?
Just wondering.
HAL! Get me a cold one!
Goran
Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
Hi, I am Konrad Schwarzbach, the bablefish translation is realy bad/funny/nonsens. Sorry even my englisch isnt much better. My son and me build the Jitter, and we can answer your questions. Till 10/28/01 we are pretty buisy because we must build two complete identical copies of Jitter, both must be in Moskow till 11/01/01. I can send you pictures of Jitter, but it's something about 500KB each. nickname spacerobot