Posts with «head» label

TMD-1 Makes Turing Machine Concepts Easy to Understand

For something that has been around since the 1930s and is so foundational to computer science, you’d think that the Turing machine, an abstraction for mechanical computation, would be easily understood. Making the abstract concepts easy to understand is what this Turning machine demonstrator aims to do.

The TMD-1 is a project that’s something of a departure from [Michael Gardi]’s usual fare, which has mostly been carefully crafted recreations of artifacts from the early days of computer history, like the Minivac 601  trainer and the DEC H-500 computer lab. The TMD-1 is, rather, a device that makes the principles of a Turing machine more concrete. To represent the concept of the “tape”, [Mike] used eight servo-controlled flip tiles. The “head” of the machine conceptually moves along the tape, its current position indicated by a lighted arrow while reading the status of the cell above it by polling the position of the servo.

Below the tape and head panel is the finite state machine through which the TMD-1 is programmed. [Mike] limited the machine to three states and four transitions, each of which is programmed by placing 3D-printed tiles on a matrix. Magnets were inserted into cavities during printing; Hall Effect sensors in the PCB below the matrix read the pattern of magnets to determine which tiles are where. The video below shows the TMD-1 counting from 0 to 10, which is enough to demonstrate the basics of Turing machines.

It’s hard not to comment on the irony of a Turing machine being run by an Arduino, but given that [Mike]’s goal was to make abstract concepts easy to understand, it makes perfect sense to leverage the platform rather than try to do this with discrete logic. And you can’t argue with results — TMD-1 made Turing machines clear to us for the first time.

Quadrupede bluetooth Spider

 

After printing pieces to Prusa I3 is the new 4-legged spider with bluetooth comm :)

    

read more

Let's Make Robots 07 Jun 20:27
32 servo controler  6v  arduino  balance  battery  biped  bluetooth  fast  greek  grrobot  hands  head  hexapod  humanoid  led  legs  mg995  mini servo  move  one leg  program  relay  robot  robotics  servos  slow  ssc32  step  vb.net  walk  warior  

Prototype animatronic head

Well my boss is organizing a robot head building contest in China and asked me to make an example to inspire the contestants. I know many will just be made from cardboard and wood but I decided that if I was going to spend time on this project then I wanted to make the most of it and develop a new product.

read more

TaLoS Humanoid Robot

Primary image

What does it do?

Balance to one leg, move hand, move head with Power Led on
Hello everybody,
I am back one year later, with my latest construction Red Dragon biped robot http://letsmakerobots.com/node/27414.
After my second construction, named Red-dragon V2 (humanoid) was too heavy and tall, wasn’t successful, I moved on constructing a new one Humanoid Robot, which I called it Talos.

Cost to build

$200,00

Embedded video

Finished project

Number

Time to build

400 hours

Type

legs

URL to more information

Weight

1650 grams

read more