enow.com Web Search

Search results

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

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FarmBot

    FarmBot is an open source precision agriculture CNC farming project consisting of a Cartesian coordinate robot farming machine, software and documentation including a farming data repository. [1] [2] The project aims to "Create an open and accessible technology aiding everyone to grow food and to grow food for everyone." [2]

  3. RoboDK - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RoboDK

    RoboDK software is the extended commercial version of RoKiSim [6] and is designed to bring powerful robotics simulation and programming capabilities to companies large and small and to coders and non-coders alike. At launch, the RoboDK library supported 200 robots from more than 20 robot manufacturers.

  4. Cartesian coordinate robot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartesian_coordinate_robot

    Kinematic diagram of Cartesian (coordinate) robot A plotter is a type of Cartesian coordinate robot.. A Cartesian coordinate robot (also called linear robot) is an industrial robot whose three principal axes of control are linear (i.e. they move in a straight line rather than rotate) and are at right angles to each other. [1]

  5. Robot Operating System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robot_Operating_System

    Perhaps the most important development of the OSRF/Open Robotics years thus far (not to discount the explosion of robot platforms which began to support ROS or the enormous improvements in each ROS version) was the proposal of ROS 2, a significant API change to ROS which is intended to support real-time programming, a wider variety of computing ...

  6. Cozmo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cozmo

    Alongside the release of Cozmo, Anki the beta version released a software development kit (SDK) to be used with Cozmo. [9] On June 26, 2017, alongside the full release of the SDK, called the "Cozmo Code Lab", [ 10 ] an update was released that made use of Scratch to provide simpler coding for a younger audience.

  7. Robot Framework - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robot_Framework

    The basic ideas for Robot Framework were shaped in Pekka Klärck's masters thesis [3] in 2005. The first version was developed at Nokia Networks the same year. Version 2.0 was released as open source software June 24, 2008 and version 3.0.2 was released February 7, 2017.

  8. Open-source robotics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-source_robotics

    Open-source robotics is a branch of robotics where robots are developed with open-source hardware and free and open-source software, publicly sharing blueprints, schematics, and source code. It is thus closely related to the open design movement, the maker movement [ 1 ] and open science .

  9. Nvidia Jetson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nvidia_Jetson

    An Nvidia Jetson Nano developer kit. The Nvidia Jetson Nano was announced as a development system in mid-March 2019 [8] The intended market is for hobbyist robotics due to the low price point. [9] [10] The final specs expose the board being sort of a power-optimized, stripped-down version of what a full Tegra X1 system would mean.