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LEGO Mindstorms: The Master's Technique

Poomah writes: "I started my LEGO building career in the late 60s with the basic bricks of that time. I built anything that came to mind. There was no end to the wonders I created with those basic bricks. As I grew up I strayed from the LEGO path to do things like going to college, getting a job, and getting married so I could start a family. When LEGO Mindstorms was released, I was one of the first in line to get one." Now he's discovered a book to help people get the most out of these toys, so here's Poomah's review of LEGO Mindstorms: The Master's Technique. LEGO Mindstorms: The Master's Technique author Jin Sato pages 361 publisher No Starch Press rating 9 reviewer Poomah ISBN 1-886411-56-5 summary How a master builds a LEGO MINDSTORMS robot.

I devoured the book, performed all of the challenges and even amazed my friends with a few inventions of my own. From time to time I would see some inventions spotlighted online. I would marvel at the time and dedication people would put into these. I would wonder, like many others, how someone would conceive such things as a copier or a Rubik's Cube solver. Now there's a book that explains LEGOS from the mind of a master and an engineer of 25 years: Jin Sato's LEGO Mindstorms: The Master's Technique."

When I first looked at this book I was so excited. It would give me the excuse I would need to play with my LEGOS once again. It even has a cute LEGO doggie on the cover. Wait a moment, that cute doggie uses two LEGO Mindstorms kits. It has two RCXs. I only have one. Is this book going to be of any use to me, the casual LEGO builder? Simply put, "Yes!"

Jin starts the book at the most logical place, the beginning. A quick one-page history, one short chapter on the LEGO bricks themselves. This includes info on what they are made of, some of the evolution of LEGO into TECHNIC pieces, and how to assemble them in different ways to create strong connections using minimal pieces.

Chapter 3 starts with the good stuff, motors and gears. What would LEGO Mindstorms be without motors and gears; just a lump of art. In just a few pages the Jin explains everything a first-year mechanical engineering student needs to know about gears. He steps you through creating a gear test bed. This shows you, using a single motor, how all the gears operate and work together. At this point I was wishing I had started reading this book at home near my LEGOS.

I could write in detail about the wonders of each chapter. To keep from writing a review that's the same size as the book, let me summarize some things. This book is filled with lots of examples. Not so much a beginning to end to create a single project, but more a process of creation. Anyone can follow a step-by-step approach for creating a single LEGO project. I have several of those at home sitting on a shelf covered in a thin layer of dust. I call them LEGO art. But with this book, each example evolves you into the next more complex example. The nice thing about these examples is the comments scattered through out. There is a bit of theory explaining how it should work before you get into the construction. This really helps you understand why you are building each part. Eventually you build up to building MIBO, the LEGO doggie on the cover. Personally I couldn't build MIBO since I only have a single RCX, but the concepts he explains gave me new ideas and a drive to build with my current resources.

Every LEGO Mindstorms enthusiast should have this book next to their LEGO storage bin. It's a great reference book when you are in a creative mood.

You can purchase LEGO Mindstorms: The Master's Technique at bn.com. You can read your own book reviews in this space by submitting your reviews after reading the book review guidelines.

8 of 154 comments (clear)

  1. Lego Mindsprings? by Smallest · · Score: 4, Funny

    Do the editors even read the articles??

    We know the answer.

    -c

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    I have discovered a truly remarkable proof which this margin is too small to contain.
  2. Virtual Legos by qurob · · Score: 4, Funny


    How about Lego software so kids can build virtual structures?

    You can't step on a piece with your bare foot, put pieces in your mouth, and your dog can't accidently crush your 4-day project.

  3. This book is a great find by PhysicsGenius · · Score: 3, Funny
    Believe it or not, we use Lego all the time down at the lab. They are great for building pretty sophistimacated models of nuclear structures with motors even providing realistic 3d movement. The fundamental sizes of the pieces and placement of holes and such are used to implement h, the planck unit of action.

    Some of our more brainy "Legheads" as we call them spend several weeks building Lego models of various particles, then ram them together to get a first order approximation of what they'll find during a (much more expensive!) accelerator run.

  4. Accuracy in Simulation. by Baka*Exp+2 · · Score: 5, Funny

    To be completely accurate a lego sim would need to be able to determine the final project midway. Then randomly choose one part and make sure you have 1 too few.

  5. Re:My webcam by IIRCAFAIKIANAL · · Score: 2, Funny

    My God man, you let every slashdot user control the thing? Funny clicking noises and smoke - I can see it now - poor little webcam

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    Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
  6. My Lego Plan by Hut-Moll · · Score: 2, Funny

    For all you closet Lego freaks there is a simple answer. 1. Have kids 2. Buy the legos, tell you wife they are "For the kids" 3. When every you play with them by yourself you can always say "I was making it for little Johnny" 4. Whenever you make something really cool make sure "little Johnny" isn't around to break it. My wife has already figured out that I am a geek. I did well to hide it from her while we were dating. She figured it out after about 2 months of living together. But I'm hoping this little Lego plan I have will put her off for a few months. This may be a little off topic but when I was 10 my life revolved around building robots with my legos, writing BASIC on my TRS-80 CoCo and DND. The really telling mark was that I wrote a DND Module on my TRS-80 CoCo.

  7. Re:Twenty Years From Now by Mad+Man · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dialogue ommitted from The Terminator:

    "The Series 200 Terminators were made out of interlocking plastic bricks. We spotted them easily..."

  8. Re:"LEGO" is a proper name by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 2, Funny
    Are you one of Lego's lawyers posting here?

    Seriously, who cares what some corporation thinks? I had legos as a kid and they're mine, not theirs. Get it, grammar nazi?

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