The "Arduino" they use is their own clone, and probably only adds $4 to the price anyway. You could get the full kit and put whatever processor you wanted on it, and not lose a great deal.
Being STEM in all, having a complete ready-to-go kit is important. So I can understand their bundling everything together. It's a nice looking robot, even with the absolutely gargantuan caps on their servo board. I mean, they're HUGE!
The "Arduino" they use is their own clone, and probably only adds $4 to the price anyway. You could get the full kit and put whatever processor you wanted on it, and not lose a great deal.
True, but why buy the cow kit when you can get the milk finished item for free less?
Apples and Snickers. One is a toy and the other is a kit one can (hopefully) learn from. If you just want to play, then of course get the cheaper ready-made.
I'm told some people still knit sweaters, even though they can buy them for $20 at Walmart.
I once proposed a book, "The Great American Snickers Diet," a tongue-in-cheek cookbook centered around Snickers and Milky Way bars that was more about the problems of poor nutrition in cheap food than a recipe book. Mars wouldn't give me rights to use their trademarks in connection with it. Can't imagine why...
Back to sloths. I'm usually not interested in these simplistic waddling platforms as a teaching tool for robots (hard to hang more stuff off it), but this one has a particular attraction to it. I might get one to tinker.
"Sunfounder" makes this Sloth kit. Surfing around Youtube I found a video on another Sunfounder product, a RasPi video car. The Chinese guy is unusually funny. Worth watching the first minute IMO.
Get this Sloth-Bot kit for $42 if you order directly from https://www.sunfounder.com/diy-4-dof-robot-kit.html . When you create an account, they email you a 30% discount code. Free ship, plus they take Paypal. You know I ordered one.
Gordon? Can you hear me now? Whit? Jon? Anybody else?
You must be logged in for your coupon code to work, BTW.
I like the carrier shield for the Arduino Nano. Makes connecting stuff easy. I just wish they didn't ONLY do a walking robot. I scanned the Web page and doesn't look like they have an alternative to the bipedal. Granted, it's static balance, but there's still a limit to what you can hang off a walking robot without running into issues.
A rolling robot isn't as "cool" to start but you can do more customizing with it. It seems to me their printed parts model would allow easy conversion to other styles of robots that would allow a whole new set of robotics experimentation.
In all, though, it's a nice platform and their Web site is well done.
@Ken Gracey : I can't help but think that Parallax could sell a bunch of these using the FLIP module. You could sell a complete kit, and/or a kit without the 3D printed parts. A wim-wim!
Comments
Being STEM in all, having a complete ready-to-go kit is important. So I can understand their bundling everything together. It's a nice looking robot, even with the absolutely gargantuan caps on their servo board. I mean, they're HUGE!
True, but why buy the cow kit when you can get the milk finished item for free less?
$35 Cubee https://www.gearbest.com/rc-robot/pp_1257078.html?wid=1433363
I'm told some people still knit sweaters, even though they can buy them for $20 at Walmart.
Suddenly I have an urge to eat apples and Snickers in my dingy blue cardigan.
Back to sloths. I'm usually not interested in these simplistic waddling platforms as a teaching tool for robots (hard to hang more stuff off it), but this one has a particular attraction to it. I might get one to tinker.
Do NOT be distracted by "Joy to the World" at 3:16.
"Sit down and take your socks off."
"Thank God you don't need a Linux VM anymore."
"It didn't work. Bummer."
Gordon? Can you hear me now? Whit? Jon? Anybody else?
You must be logged in for your coupon code to work, BTW.
https://www.ottodiy.com/
Looks worth checking out!
A rolling robot isn't as "cool" to start but you can do more customizing with it. It seems to me their printed parts model would allow easy conversion to other styles of robots that would allow a whole new set of robotics experimentation.
In all, though, it's a nice platform and their Web site is well done.
Wim with Jim! Obscure "Cheers" reference.