| | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| (...) Don't worry, that has nothing to do with you being new to all this - we all are! Well, all but a luckey few... (...) I doubt it will be completely abandoned. After all, the first thing I want is to kludge a way to interface a NXT with and RCX, (...) (19 years ago, 6-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
| | | | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| (...) I threw my name in as one of the 100 early testers (who here hasn't :) and one of the questions was on FLL involvement, and a willingness to write FLL documentation. That leads me to think that they are definitely considering extending the NXT (...) (19 years ago, 8-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
| | | | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| (...) The NXT FAQ addresses this question - it says that both the RCX and NXT will *both* be allowed in the 2006 FLL season. That should make for some very interesting decisions and comparisions. It also suggests to me that along with the MUPs we (...) (19 years ago, 8-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
| | | | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| If they're looking to the future, I would expect it to be a digital bus, much like something my robo-club has been thinking about. It could be I2C or CANN-based, or proprietary (unlikely). Six wires makes sense -- ground, bi-directional signal (2 (...) (19 years ago, 8-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
| | | | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| [apologies to Steve, I sent these to him instead of the list -- this is the only list I'm on that puts the last poster's email in the 'reply to' field] I've been playing with technics-dominated ideas for some time, but little things like this always (...) (19 years ago, 8-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
| | | | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| (...) I just saw Lego's definiton of a servo motor. It resembles a industry servo, not a hobby servo. In the hobby servo, the closed loop is done in the servo electronics, but in the industry servo, the closed loop is done in the controller. (...) (19 years ago, 8-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
| | | | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| (...) This all makes some sense, though it seems strange to put a digital board in the servos, but not do the control there. In any case, I think my first project will be to figure out how to use the USB port to connect the NXT to a more powerful (...) (19 years ago, 8-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
| | | | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| (...) I was wondering if one could make a two port host device with its own power source (battries). It could be relatively simple, where one host port polls the device port of the NXT to find out if there is anything to do, and then the second host (...) (19 years ago, 8-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
| | | | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| (...) So you are saying you have a sort of mini-host acting as a bridge between connected devices like a NXT and something else. That sounds like an interesting idea ..... I think one of the reasons why hosts are tricky and devices are easier is (...) (19 years ago, 8-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
| | | | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| John Barnes wrote: I was wondering if this might be (...) I think I have one : ) It's an HP Jornada 820. Runs CE from ROM, but people are busily hacking at getting Linux to run on it. It's a nice little machine and I suspect the perfect device to (...) (19 years ago, 8-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
| | | | Re: mindstorms NXT
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| (...) Yes, this was what I was brainstorming of... (...) Yes, this is very true. If you always used A for the NXT then you'd still need device drivers for whatever is plugged into B. (...) Yes, as long as the WindowsCE has host capabilities. My (...) (19 years ago, 9-Jan-06, to lugnet.robotics)
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