Construction details and still pictures are
(via BattleBricks)
Philo Hurbain's new NXT book is now in stock (twelve days early) at Amazon.com. The link is
This group built an NXT warehouse facility complete with shelves, crates and a forklift.
A friend of mine, Michael Fitzgerald, writes a column on innovation for the New York Times. (That's Mike in the photo).My name is Eric Burdo. Some of you may know me from Brick Labs. http://www.brick-labs.com/ I was talking to Jim the other day to see if he wanted to reprint any of my articles from Brick Labs (since Brick Labs will be retired on or about the 10th of April). Instead, Jim offered me a position as a guest writer.
I will be moving some of the articles from Brick Labs over to this site, and any future LEGO contributions will be made here, for your reading enjoyment. If there are any particular articles on Brick Labs that you want, please post a link in the comments. I’ll migrate them over, and possible update them if I can.
I have been an avid LEGO collector since I was about 7. That gives me about 23 years of collecting. :) I started into the Mindstorms world about 3 or 4 years ago with the RCX. I tried to get into the LEGO beta program for the NXT, but alas, fate smiled on others… so, I had to wait. My wife bought me a NXT kit for my birthday back in September. My son and I have been dabbling with robots since then.
My Interests:
My Robotic Creations:
Future Projects:
On NXTLog, R2D2893 posted this gigantic Mecha, called Gibbous 8, whose head and arms are controlled by a NXT. Very impressive, R2D2893!
You can see more about this project here.
In the latest edition of the Lego Magazine, there was this neat-looking NXT Snowcat made by LEGO Master Builder Dave Gold. It looks really neat, and I was wondering - why haven't I seen this anywhere else? Has anyone else seen it, other than in the Magazine?
-Jonathan


"This one has many of the missing things such as Bluetooth, floating point, and bitwise logical operators, as well as a more streamlined and Lua-ish API for the NXT specific functions."I've written some small guide that describes how to install and configure pbLua and how to download and run pbLua programs to resp. on the NXT brick.
"an easy to use programming interface forCheck it out and comment your experiences here!
robotics, which has been used so far on the Aibo. I thought you might be
interested to know that we have released a version of URBI for Lego
Mindstorms NXT.
[...]
URBI is free, with open source interfaces, and you don't have to change
the original firmware to use it. We have a forum also to discuss
technical matters here:
http://forum.gostai.com/viewforum.php?f=16 "



My daughter's first grade teacher asked them all to design and build a trap to catch a leprechaun this week. She told them leprechauns are tricky and notorious for ignoring signs and doing whatever they please. My daughter is pictured here with her NXT invention for catching that pesky leprechaun!




Researchers from the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale in Lausanne (CH) have built a salamander-like robot that is able to mimic a salamander's way of moving both on land and in the water. Yet, the target was not primarily to build such a robot but to verify some theories on the way the legs are internally controlled in real amphibians.
As the Surveyor rolls up and over objects, I can see the values change. Now what I need to do is translate those values into useful information that can help me determine if the robot is at a dangerous angle (possibly ready to tip over on its side). In Surveyor, I originally used the Acceleration Sensor to determine the up/down position of the camera as well as to center the camera parallel to the floor. (Brian Davis used the sensor with his LNE robot to determine if it was "upside down.")







Where I live, we need one of these--right now. It's an autonomous, snowplowing robot with a built-in GPS and video cameras for eyes. It "eats" snow then expels it out the back in blocks, to be used as alternative coolant for various things.