Staticfree Blog

I have been prowling the concrete wilderness for 2 hours, 40 minutes, and 31 seconds. Before that, I was at home.

Wed, 03 Dec 2003

This robotic vehicle is totally awesome. It has 4 carefully-controlled wheels per side which can rotate more than 90° as well as move forward and backward, raise and lower. It can drive normally, sideways, spin in place, walk(!), and other keen things. If only there was enough monetary interest to build a full-scale model of it. Now that I'd pay to see.

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Thu, 08 May 2003

The robot competition went well. After many-an-hour of last-minute tweaking, building and designing, we got our robot mostly working. I was able to get manual-override going nicely, so I could drive the robot around with a USB joystick. The automatic mode doesn't entirely function correctly - it seems to be a bit confused as to how to actually drive the robot. With some luck and testing, we should be able to fix that soon, though. There're some photos online for your photonic, pictoral pleasure.

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Fri, 02 May 2003

It's that time again: robot crunch time. We worked on our robot until 1:00 last night and ended the night by getting the treads on and aligned. We strapped on (using electrical tape, of course) some 30Amp 12v batteries, a high-current relay and a "Emergency Off" switch on on a long cord and started driving it around outside. We took photos and videos. The thing's a beast and is definitely prepared to crush all hu-mans.

Today, Andrew and I need to make the robot's brain's go. It's got all its brunt, but without brains, it's just a killer robot that makes a ton of noise. With brains, it's a smart killer robot that makes a ton of noise. Smart noise. We've gotten USB part #1 going - the GPS. Next up is the motor controller controller. We need to make one PWM generator for each motor controller that we use, then write some simple code to interact with them. Once we get the USB chip's programming done we're essentially home-free.

On a more chocolaty note, I've forgotten how much I love hot, malted chocolate. Thankfully, I've a rather full container of it on my shelf in Geekhaüs's cupboard. Ah, I miss Geekhaüs - I went to bed before ¾ of its inhabitants at a wholesome 04:00. Now if only Rochester had a job or two lined up for me, it'd be perfect. Well, almost perfect: I still need to get a car so I can visit some friendly .ma.us friends (especially those at remote .edu's).

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Mon, 06 May 2002

Well, the robotics competition went well. We got second place out of the two entries into our league. ah well, at least it wasn't an honorable mention or something. Our robot, after many hours of coding, actually followed its way to gps coordinates. Sadly, the robot's chain kept getting loose, the laptop's battries kept dying and the thing couldn't turn very well on the grass. After not sleeping since friday, I decided to get some rest. 14h of sleep still isn't enough, i think.
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Fri, 03 May 2002

Well hopefully it's us crunching on getting everything finalized, not the robot crunching small children. Although the later might be nifty depending on how annoying they are.

The code is almost complete! Well, by complete I mean mimimally functional. Which is useful as the competition is a day or two away and we've not yet tested the bot as a whole. Let's hope the unit testing works out as well as it is supposed to. Andrew, Zac and I pulled an all-nighter in the labs, tossed the code into CVS (finally!) and just coded as much as we could.

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Thu, 18 Apr 2002

I've written up a paper on our current SME robotics project. Now if we can only get it functional like the paper says before the competition.

Hm. I've been up since 10:00 wednesday. I should sleep.

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Fri, 05 Apr 2002

Our robot works! well, when we connect power to the motors, it drives anyway. Unfortunately (or maybe it's not unfortunate), when we designed it we didn't do too many calulations as to how fast we were making it go. Well, we ran it at half power and it's going (we guess) about 5mph. That's quite a speedy autonomous robot.

Coding + trance + coke == happy steve

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Wed, 03 Apr 2002

Last year, RIT's SME club made a robot for the SME competition being held in pittsburgh that year. I've now written a paper on it, detailing how it worked and some other fluffy goodness. This year, the competition is being held here at RIT (May 4th) and I'm leading the the team that's building the new bot. This new one uses a GPS to navigate its way around a given terrain autonomously. It'll be really cool when we get it working, as the hardware is practically a tank. No, it is a tank
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