YOU NEED
- Robot kit
- Soldering iron and accessories
- Flush cutters
- Safety goggles
- Screwdriver
As a kid, I loved robots. From Robbie the Robot and Metal Mickey to the Terminator and the robots from The Black Hole, if it had a CPU and a tendency to run rampant and threaten the destruction of the world, I was there. Now middle-aged, my love of robots has never waned, but I would rather see them as companions than overlords bent on our destruction.
Robots are still awesome and over the past decade they have become easier and cheaper to create, largely thanks to the Raspberry Pi and Arduino. Building a robot is a right of passage for an aspiring maker. By building your own, you learn key maker skills: soldering, circuits and code. If you have the means and skills to do so, you can go DIY and build a fully custom robot from scratch, using laser-cut or 3D-printed parts. But if starting out, you can use one of the many kits available.
If you want a completely ready-to-go solution, Pimoroni’s Trilobot is an amazing kit. Using PCBs as the chassis, this kit integrates the Raspberry Pi 4 as a central part. It can work with ultrasonic sensors, line-following sensors and many others via the GPIO.
At the other end of the robotics scale are the advanced robots that use machine learning and artificial intelligence along with sensors and cameras to understand the world around them and navigate. The best examples of this are the robots from Boston Dynamics, and to a lesser extent the robot vacuum cleaners that keep our homes clean.
This story is from the January 2023 edition of Linux Format.
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This story is from the January 2023 edition of Linux Format.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
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