RIMM's LEGO Machines Test Blackberry
LEGO - my - Crackberry writes "Matthias Wandel is an engineer at Research in Motion (RIMM), the company that makes the Blackberry. What did RIMM turn to for testing the antenna reception of one of its 900MHz devices? LEGO machines. Specifically a device made of LEGO that could rotate a Blackberry about its horizontal & vertical axis in a pre-defined pattern."
Check out his site. He's been building amazing stuff for years. I first stumbled on it when I was researching spud guns. He even made his own pipe organ.
I'm not. It seems like a logical choice.
Want to test different angles precisely? Use some sort of robot.
Only going to build it once, and want it to be easy to build? Use Legos.
Need only rudimentary instructions (e.g. "rotate for 0.2 seconds") to rotate something on said robot? Use Mindstorms.
Nothing beats the satisfaction of soldering one's own circuit board and programming in C, but for something quick, easy to use, and powerful, Legos are the best solution.
We're all familiar with the storm of patents ending with "on the internet." Perhaps now there will be a new storm of patent claims ending with "using Lego."
That really *is* Research In Motion!
Cool idea, but I wonder how long the device would hold out. LEGO isn't exactly designed for industrial apps. On the other hand, it is designed for small children, who provide perhaps the toughest test environment imaginable!
I figure if you're going to write an article about RIM's activities, you had best get the name right. It is 'RIM', not 'RIMM'. Both the /. article, and TFA have it wrong....
I am astounded!
anon
At the risk of being modded down... surely by now everyone here ought to know that if you say "legos" not "lego" when talking about more than 1 lego brick, yet another barely-on-topic flame war about the pluralisation of Lego is inevitable? It happens every single time there is a Lego related story.
Is it time to start modding people who still use "legos" when they know what the result will be as trolls?
A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
At my university we build robots out of lego to test pathfinding software.
It's cheap, and it can house the motors/circuit boards and stick together under a bit of stress, its perfect.
Meccano is good, but it can take longer to assemble. That's more of use for robots that need to withstand a lot more stress, such as arms.
Engineers today, what do they know? Make it too simple and too cheap and the boss will think anybody can do it.
Pining for the fjords