Snively '11 | January 12, 2010
"Watch our robot grow up!"
Sorry for the absence, I've been busy (lame excuse, sorry. The actual excuse is that I'm tired of uploading my pictures for this blog because it's annoying and blog entries without pictures suck).
This, however, is too important. I've been building a robot for a class this month and it's now alive and moving! We cut him from acrylic, slapped three motors and some omniwheels on him, and gave him a battery + eeePc. He's just now learning to drive and move (which is exciting!) but even more exciting is the fact that we trained him to tweet whatever he's doing. So, if you'd like, you can follow our robot as he becomes sentient and grows up into a red-ball-nomming beasty.
Definitely be tuned in to the feed on Jan 29th for the final competition, he'll tell you what he's doing the entire time!
Cheers.
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Posted by: Derek on January 12, 2010 10:53 PM
Which class?
Posted by: Piper '12 on January 12, 2010 11:36 PM
Did you design the omniwheels too?
Posted by: makesense on January 13, 2010 12:16 AM
OMG! The twitter bots are becoming real! Please, train him not to spam. hahahah
Posted by: Caio '14? on January 13, 2010 02:44 AM
Sounds amazing. =) Cheers! *slaps robot to yours* oh oops, sorry.
Good luck, c2bot.
Posted by: Justin on January 13, 2010 08:36 AM
Which class is it? I guess its not 6.270. Your Lego robot was really awesome, Team Awesome.
Posted by: parav on January 13, 2010 08:51 AM
this is the start of the apocalypse. soon these twitter bots will control the ipods, and together they will condemn us all
Posted by: Snad on January 13, 2010 11:03 AM
Put this in my application essay, as a clipped "supplement" example....good or bad?
Observable laws and set conditions define our methods of definition in relation to Cosmological models of the universe, and by intransalistic association, the "theory of everything", or better yet, the very notion of existence itself. Clearly seen are accepted properties such as gravity, universal expansion, relativity, and so forth; few stands are given to any aberrations from these "standards", as they are, of course, proven.
However, the questionable reason for origin (or its reciprocal) may coerce perusal of such unquestioned 'absolutes.' The in-sanstrinstic law of infinity procalates an idea: what if ANYTHING could have theoretical existed? After the big bang? Or before the big bang? Why is the universe as it is at all- a big bang 13.7 billion years ago followed by what we see today? If random trumps reason, not form should be any more expected then another. Existence could have created a non-physical universe, or a universe that hasn't started yet (now THERE'S a mind-warping thought) or ,I suppose, ANYTHING. Existence might not have been at all. Or there might have been (or might be) more than one. This would also challenge the concept of "supernatural." Theoretically, any verison of reality mathematically could have (and paradoxically does.) So is natural theomorphism to hard to believe?
After the big bang, anything could have formed. Whose to say there aren't multiverses, "superverses", or an infinite number of scenarios?
Posted by: astrophysicist on January 13, 2010 12:18 PM
Put this in my application essay, as a clipped "supplement" example....good or bad?
Observable laws and set conditions define our methods of definition in relation to Cosmological models of the universe, and by intransalistic association, the "theory of everything", or better yet, the very notion of existence itself. Clearly seen are accepted properties such as gravity, universal expansion, relativity, and so forth; few stands are given to any aberrations from these "standards", as they are, of course, proven.
However, the questionable reason for origin (or its reciprocal) may coerce perusal of such unquestioned 'absolutes.' The in-sanstrinstic law of infinity procalates an idea: what if ANYTHING could have theoretical existed? After the big bang? Or before the big bang? Why is the universe as it is at all- a big bang 13.7 billion years ago followed by what we see today? If random trumps reason, not form should be any more expected then another. Existence could have created a non-physical universe, or a universe that hasn't started yet (now THERE'S a mind-warping thought) or ,I suppose, ANYTHING. Existence might not have been at all. Or there might have been (or might be) more than one. This would also challenge the concept of "supernatural." Theoretically, any verison of reality mathematically could have (and paradoxically does.) So is natural theomorphism to hard to believe?
After the big bang, anything could have formed. Whose to say there aren't multiverses, "superverses", or an infinite number of scenarios?
Posted by: astrophysicist on January 13, 2010 12:19 PM
@Snively '11: An ASUS Eee centric robot? Very xkcd. :)
@astrophysicist: A tad late? Anyways, I'm sorry, but I don't see the point of this essay. What prompt is it answering?
Posted by: Andrew Huang ('14?) on January 13, 2010 09:42 PM
Ball nomming beasty!!! I love it!!!
"He's just now learning to drive and move (which is exciting!)"
OH... BETTER GET HIM SOME INSURANCE...lol! Pretty cool bots you Mit-ers build!
Posted by: genius ('18) on January 13, 2010 10:19 PM
@andrew huang: no prompt, just something a little extra I decided to throw in...
Posted by: astrophysicist: on January 13, 2010 11:23 PM
Wow. Good luck bro! And wow, it's eee......eeePC....the best netbook power wise.
Posted by: joemill on January 14, 2010 10:41 AM
As an alternative to Quantum Theory there is a new theory that describes and explains the
mysteries of physical reality. While not disrespecting the value of Quantum Mechanics as a
tool to explain the role of quanta in our universe. This theory states that there is also a
classical explanation for the paradoxes such as EPR and the Wave-Particle Duality. The Theory is called the Theory of Super Relativity and is located at: http://www.superrelativity.org
This theory is a philosophical attempt to reconnect the physical universe to realism and
deterministic concepts. It explains the mysterious.
Posted by: MikeS on January 14, 2010 01:59 PM
Text "HAITI" to 90999 to donate $10 to Red Cross relief.
Thank you
Posted by: Protoform X Y on January 15, 2010 06:42 AM
This has like no relevance to this post, I just wanted to say that you remind me of Sheldon (Jim Parsons), on The Big Bang Theory?
Actually, to be more accurate, it's like Sheldon reminds me of you...but that's moderately creepy, so...
Posted by: penny on January 15, 2010 10:09 PM
Whoa.
"...we trained him to tweet whatever he's doing."
How did you DO that?
At the danger of sounding like I live on a farmstead with twenty cows and fifteen goats, I never knew that was possible.
@Caio '14 Twitter bots! LOL.
Posted by: peiyun on January 15, 2010 10:43 PM
Hey, that's very cool! twitter bots :D
wonder if the robot can be instructed by tweets too :p
Posted by: Dipta on January 17, 2010 11:55 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FjeMDvCdrtc
Counterpoint to your long-ago link to "Final Countdown".
Posted by: Mom out west on January 17, 2010 11:18 PM
@peiyun Don't worry. Neither did I. And to be PERFECTLY honest, I didn't even know what a tweet was until a few months ago...and at least several times a week I get put on blast by my friends for not knowing or recognizing celebrities. There is no shame in living under a rock :) Safer during tornadoes, anyways.
Posted by: Amethyst ('14?) on January 20, 2010 07:45 PM
As the programmer responsible for making our robot tweet its actions, let me assure you all that it was by far one of the easier programming tasks associated with working on the robot. Even getting it to drive straight was harder than adding Twitter.
Posted by: Mason '10 on January 21, 2010 03:49 AM
