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1) I wouldn't say better... rather, complementary, and certainly
cheaper. Visiting the Butiá pages, the only picture I see showing an
MCU
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.fing.edu.uy/inco/proyectos/butia/images/pistaButia.jpg">http://www.fing.edu.uy/inco/proyectos/butia/images/pistaButia.jpg</a> is
showing an Arduino. Add a motor driver, and we are well above $30,
plus shipping. The USBButiá board is maybe cheaper IF done in
quantity by experts (then add labor). <br>
MSP430 + (L293D OR some darlington array) can be "free" if you get
them as samples from TI, or less than $5 when purchased, <i>plus
shipping</i>, the old bane. the advantage of using a darlington
driver is that then you may use plain DC motors, which can be free
if lucky with old electronic parts (beautiful gear system available
in old CDROM drives)<br>
<br>
2) yop - the XO "drives" the vehicle with the MSP430 option also.
Now, I put quote marks as I have no idea - yet - on how to send data
direct realtime from the XO to the robot, bypassing the MCU. What
seems to be happening is that Butiá depends on sending code/program
to the Arduino, and the the 'duino does the brains of the robot.
(¿Butiás, me corrigen, por favor?). So yes, you may send code to the
430, and then same. <br>
Putting the XO on top of the robot appears to me as a cute photo op
thing, not a necessity. It would be amazingly cool if the XO camera
would capture images that real time were processed by the XO, or man
a sonar sensor, or something. So far I don't think this is
happening, and the XO on the platform feels like a <i>pour la
gallerie</i> innocent gimmick. <br>
Bottom line: control, it's a software issue. I am coding something
that will allow LOGO-like instructions to be the input, instead of
complex-er C, but not there yet<br>
<br>
3) Oh! but LEGO has a good marketing budget, and I may be mistaken,
have already been purchased by the brilliant UY education
administrators for every single middle/high school. <br>
Children have no ideas what is going on anywhere, so I do not worry
about that (A LEGO driver brick is as much magical and as an MCU). <br>
I do worry about the cost: A LEGO is assured to be carefully kept
under lock and key, and only safe students and teachers allowed to
touch it, you can buy a couple hundred MCUs for the cost of a single
LEGO brain. A 430-based solution, and even an Arduino, might have a
chance to be lent to a kid. A base kit, 430, or ATtiny, say $10 USD
including two motors and sensors and PCB, could even be purchased by
kids or their parents or the result of a bake sale. At
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://kidbot.org">http://kidbot.org</a> we are working on putting such together.<br>
BTW, the Universidad Pontificia of Lima, Perú, and the Universidad
Católica of Bolivia, I would say the MITs of those respective
countries, have started degree programs in Mechatronics a couple
years ago. Both have only ONE semester of actual hands-on robotying,
both are Lego only. Those professors are so highly trained and
respected and bright that they must know what they are doing, which
means the rest of us must be wrong to think other options :-)<br>
<br>
4) The choices made by Butiá make sense in some context (UdelaR
fing), and I genuinely praise and respect their effort, but IMHO are
so far VERY hard to emulate independently.<br>
IF<br>
1) the PCB were available<br>
2) all parts were locally available, even better as kits, reducing
shipping/customs issues<br>
I might agree on the "designed to be reproduced by any one". <br>
(their page says they are available locally, but give no details)<br>
<br>
What @ <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://kidbot.org">http://kidbot.org</a> we are trying to put together is precisely
a set of materials, parts and such that, more than anything, ARE
*easy to find parts*. Right now we are VERY busy with the solar
vehicle for Saturday's race, so this is on hold. On that one: the
only part we paid for is the solar cells - everything else was
scrounged from electronic cadavers. Of course we have the benefit
that in the USA you can get dead printers by simple trashcan-diving,
while under certain ideologies you have to buy everything. Even
then, I ideologically favor plain DC motors over complex feedback
ones.<br>
<br>
I am 100% convinced that the MSP430 could, potentially, provide a
cheaper, easier to *make* robotics platform, eventually. However, I
would want to see that as a collaboration with Butiá rather than an
"instead". I have not contacted them yet on this, as mentioned above
I have bee busy with the other project (actually mostly with my
patent. BTW, as of yesterday, I am "patent pending", yeeeha!).<br>
<br>
Yama<br>
<br>
<br>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 09/27/2012 08:17 AM, Tony Anderson
wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote cite="mid:506451CE.9010808@usa.net" type="cite">Hi,
<br>
<br>
I am wondering how this TI MSP430 running on XO 1 - Robotics!
relates to the Butia project in Uruguay. Is this a better
solution?
<br>
<br>
What appeals to me the most about Butia is that it enable the
child to its own XO driving the vehicle. Can this be done with the
MSP430?
<br>
<br>
In Uruguay there was a demonstration of the Lego robot - pathetic!
It was tied to an umbilical cord. It was pre-built so the children
had no idea of how it worked or what was going on inside. And, of
course, it is frightfully expensive.
<br>
<br>
The Butia project has developed a control board which is designed
to be reproduced by any one. I am hoping that someone in SF will
undertake to build the Butia kit. Could the MSP430 provide a
cheaper and easier to build control board for Butia?
<br>
<br>
Yours,
<br>
<br>
Tony
<br>
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</blockquote>
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