enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Robotis Bioloid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robotis_Bioloid

    The Robotis Bioloid (stylized as ROBOTIS BIOLOID) is a hobbyist and educational robot kit produced by the South Korean robot manufacturer Robotis. The Bioloid platform consists of components and small, modular servomechanisms called the AX-12A Dynamixels, which can be used in a daisy-chained fashion to construct robots of various configurations ...

  3. Robot kit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robot_kit

    [2] [3] They are mostly made of plastics elements like Lego Mindstorms, rero Reconfigurable Robot kit, the Robotis Bioloid, Robobuilder, the ROBO-BOX-3.0 (produced by Inex), and the lesser-known KAI Robot (produced by Kaimax), or aluminium elements like Lynxmotion's Servo Erector Set and the qfix kit. Some robots, such as Ebdot, come ready ...

  4. Lego Mindstorms NXT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lego_Mindstorms_NXT

    It can control Lego NXT robots over a Bluetooth serial port (serial port communication is part of the base functionality of MATLAB) or via USB. [18] (free & open-source). Simulink is a block-diagram environment for modeling and simulating dynamic systems. A user can design and simulate control algorithms and Lego systems, and program the Lego ...

  5. Lego Mindstorms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lego_Mindstorms

    Lego Mindstorms NXT was a programmable robotics kit released by Lego in August 2006, replacing the first-generation Lego Mindstorms kit. [24] The kit consists of 577 pieces, including: 3 servo motors, 4 sensors (ultrasonic, sound, touch, and light), 7 connection cables, a USB interface cable, and the NXT Intelligent Brick. It lets the robot ...

  6. Qfix robot kit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qfix_robot_kit

    Qfix robots in a soccer match. Like Lego mindstorms, it is a robot kit consisting of mechanical parts, a controller, different sensors and actuators, and a software environment to program the constructed robot. Unlike Lego, in qfix the mechanical parts are made of aluminium.

  7. Category:Bipedal humanoid robots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Bipedal_humanoid...

    Pages in category "Bipedal humanoid robots" The following 42 pages are in this category, out of 42 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Albert HUBO;

  8. Self-reconfiguring modular robot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-reconfiguring_modular...

    Modular self-reconfiguring robotic systems or self-reconfigurable modular robots are autonomous kinematic machines with variable morphology. Beyond conventional actuation, sensing and control typically found in fixed-morphology robots, self-reconfiguring robots are also able to deliberately change their own shape by rearranging the connectivity of their parts, in order to adapt to new ...

  9. KHR-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KHR-1

    The KHR-1 is a programmable, bipedal humanoid robot introduced in June 2004 by a Japanese company Kondo Kagaku.At the time of its introduction it was one of the least expensive programmable bipedal robots (prices averaging around $1,600 in the United States and ¥128,000 in Japan).