Category Archives: Robotics

Mostly Vex and Mindstorms.

South Tampa Community Teams Forming for FLL and Jr. FLL

I have confirmed a meeting schedule and location for our South Tampa FIRST LEGO League and Junior FIRST LEGO League team meeting!

We will have an organizational meeting on Tuesday, September 6th at 6:30 P.M. The meeting will be at 3841 W. Kennedy Blvd. It is on the north side of Kennedy between Dale Mabry and Church. We’re in the same building as Five Guys but at the opposite end. Our regular meeting will begin the following Monday (and Mondays thereafter) with a start time to be determined at our organizational meeting.

At the organizational meeting, I will explain the Jr. FLL and FLL programs and inform the parents and students of all the operational details. I’ll introduce the programs, discuss the calendar and budget. You’ll be able to get your questions answered at the meeting. I believe it will take about an hour to go through everything.

Please RSVP by contacting me or commenting below so I can have a rough head count of how many people to expect. If you can’t make the meeting but are interested in the program, send me an email or call. I’m happy to go over everything with you on the phone or over coffee.

In the meantime, you can download single page PDF files with an overview of each program from:

Jr. FLL (for students aged 6-9)

FLL (for students aged 10-14)

Feel free to share these with and invite other families who might be interested. This is an open, community program for kids who don’t have access to robotics programs at their schools.

If you have any questions before the meeting, please don’t hesitate to call or email. I’m very excited about both programs and can’t wait to see everyone!

Google Lunar X Prize MoonBots 2.0 Winners Announced

Competition engages students in space exploration by challenging them to simulate Google Lunar X PRIZE missions with LEGO robots

PLAYA VISTA, CA (Aug. 31, 2011) – The X PRIZE Foundation and LEGO Group announced today winners of the MoonBots 2.0: A Google Lunar X PRIZE LEGO® MINDSTORMS® Challenge. The competition challenges teams of students ages 9 to 17 to design, program and build robots that simulate lunar missions mirroring the $30 million Google Lunar X PRIZE international competition for privately funded teams to build a rover to land on and explore the Moon’s surface.

The Grand Prize winner, Team LegoAces (Granville, OH), earned a VIP trip to LEGOLAND Florida® in October. Team Just Ducky (Woodbury, MN) was awarded second place and third place went to Team Lunar Lords (Bellevue, WA). All three teams will receive free team registration for the 2012 FIRST® robotics season.

“The X PRIZE Foundation is proud of the accomplishments by all student participants and how they brought their science and technology insights to their communities,” says Chanda Gonzales, Google Lunar X PRIZE Education Manager. “We are thrilled to see high levels of interest among younger audiences in MoonBots and Google Lunar X PRIZE. This is a terrific opportunity for them to work on projects that could turn into future careers in space exploration.”

The student competition, started in May, attracted 75 teams from around the world to register and submit fun, scientific video clips about space exploration. Each team also wrote a proposal explaining why their robot should be funded to go to the moon, similar to proposals by actual Google Lunar X PRIZE teams. The 20 team finalists received free LEGO components to construct a large Moonscape that served as the competition’s “playing field.” Finalists designed their robot using CAD software and programmed their robot to compete in a live lunar mission. All finalists completed a STEM community outreach project to help support, mentor and get kids excited about MoonBots 2.0 Challenge. The 20 finalists and their websites are:

2011 LEGO Odyssey (Santa Clara, CA) https://sites.google.com/site/team2011legoodyssey/

Anthem-a-Tronics (Anthem, AZ) http://www.anthem-a-tronics.com/moonbots.html

DragonBots (Santiago, Chile) http://www.dragonbots.org/

Iron Reign (Dallas, TX) http://www.ironreignrobotics.com/moonbots

LegoAces (Granville, OH) http://www.legoaces.org/MoonBots/Home.html

Lehi Moonstormers (Lehi, UT) http://moonstormers.blogspot.com/

Lunar LegoBots (Oak Ridge, TN) http://www.discoveret.org/ingrid/legobots/

Lunar Lords (Bellevue, WA) http://lunarlords.wordpress.com/

Lunar Scouts (Chesapeake, VA) http://lunarscouts.webs.com/

Molokai Mahina 2.0 (Kaunakakai, HI) http://molokaimahina.yolasite.com/

Moonwalk (Morris Plains, NJ) https://sites.google.com/site/walkthemoonwalk/home

New Hartford RoboSpartans (New Hartford/Utica, NY) https://sites.google.com/site/robospartansmoonbots2011/

Pi in the Sky (McLean, VA) http://moonbots.mcleanrobotics.org/

Q.E.D. (Greensboro, NC) http://www.teamqed.tk/

Raider Robotix (North Brunswick, NJ) http://moonbots.raiderrobotix.org/Moonbots/index.html

Say Watt? (East Brunswick, NJ) http://say-watt.org/wp2/moonbots

Team Just Ducky (Woodbury, MN) http://justducky.jimdo.com/

Techno Inventors (Malaysia) http://technoinventors.yolasite.com/

The Pink Team (Rockledge, FL) http://thepinkteam.tumblr.com/

X-Treme Team (Indio, CA) https://sites.google.com/a/smarteducation.us/x-treme/home

The competition also included an education outreach component where teams completed a science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) project in their community through robotics fair participation, space exploration literacy projects and technical training support mentorships. Many MoonBots teams partnered with teams vying for the Google Lunar X PRIZE, learning from top innovators in the field.

“It’s fantastic to see what efforts and energy the 20 finalist teams put into their outreach activities as part of the MoonBots 2.0 competition,” adds Steven Canvin, LEGO MINDSTORMS Community Manager. “The teams were assigned to make public presentations explaining why science, technology, engineering and math are important to lunar exploration and the solutions that need to be made around it. They’ve been amazing in connecting with organizations and companies working with space exploration, presenting in their communities and reaching broader groups through mass media. MoonBots 2.0 has been successful in attracting young budding scientists who have grown with the challenge, learned a lot in the process, built ingenious LEGO MINDSTORMS robots (some for the first time), and taught others about their research. The future for space exploration and associated sciences looks very promising.”

In addition to X PRIZE Foundation and LEGO Group, competition partners include WIRED magazine and FIRST® robotics. To learn more about MoonBots 2.0 Challenge winners, visit http://www.moonbots.org

ABOUT X PRIZE FOUNDATION

Founded in 1995, the X PRIZE Foundation is the leading non-profit organization solving the world’s greatest challenges through creating and managing large-scale, high-profile, incentivized prize competitions that stimulate investment in research and development worth far more than the prize itself. The organization motivates and inspires brilliant innovators from all disciplines and socio-economic sectors to endow their intellectual and financial capital for the benefit of humanity. The X PRIZE Foundation conducts competitions in four Prize Groups: Education & Global Development; Energy & Environment; Life Sciences; and Exploration. Past prizes include the $10 million Ansari X PRIZE for sending the world’s first private vehicle into space and back; and the $10 million Progressive Insurance Automotive X PRIZE for creating safe, affordable, production-capable vehicles that exceed 100 MPG or energy equivalent (MPGe). Active prizes include the $30 million Google Lunar X PRIZE, the $10 million Archon Genomics X PRIZE, and the $1.4 million Wendy Schmidt Oil Cleanup X CHALLENGE. For more information, visit www.xprize.org.  

ABOUT GOOGLE LUNAR X PRIZE

The $30 million Google Lunar X PRIZE will be awarded to the first privately funded teams to build robots that successfully land on the lunar surface, explore the Moon by moving at least 500 meters (~1/3 of a mile), and return high definition video and imagery.  The competition's grand prize is worth $20 million. To provide an extra incentive for teams to work quickly, the grand prize value will change to $15 million whenever a government-funded mission successfully explores the lunar surface, currently projected to occur in 2013. Additionally, a second place prize of $5 million will be available for the second team to complete the competition objectives. A total of $4 million in bonus prizes are available for achieving other specific mission objectives, including operation at night; traveling more than 5km over the lunar surface; detection of water; and precision landing near an Apollo site or other lunar sites of interest (such as landing/crash sites of man-made space hardware).  Lastly, a $1 million award will go to the team that demonstrates the greatest attempts to promote diversity in the field of space exploration. For more information, go to www.googlelunarxprize.org.

ABOUT LEGO GROUP

The LEGO Group (www.lego.com) is a privately held, family-owned company based in Billund, Denmark. It was founded in 1932, and today, the group is one of the world’s leading manufacturers of play materials for children, employing approximately 9,500 people globally. The LEGO Group is committed to the development of children’s creative and imaginative abilities. LEGO products can be purchased in more than 130 countries. 

LEGO MINDSTORMS

In 1998, The LEGO Group spearheaded the consumer robotics category the company with the launch of the LEGO® MINDSTORMS® Robotics Invention System that introduced children to the world of robotics, offering the ability to create their own intelligent, interactive, autonomous LEGO robots. The LEGO MINDSTORMS NXT robotics toolkits allow children of all ages to design, build, and program their own robots using LEGO building elements, customized hardware, and an easy-to-use icon-based graphical programming language.

North Tampa FLL and Jr. FLL Kickoff Scheduled

I have confirmed a meeting schedule and location for our North Tampa FIRST LEGO League and Junior FIRST LEGO League team meetings!

Our inaugural meeting is this Thursday, August 25th at 6:00 P.M. We will meet at Messiah Lutheran Church located at 14920 Hutchison Road in Tampa. The church is on the left side about one block north of Ehrlich Road on Hutchison Rd. We’re in the youth center which is the first building on the right when you are in the parking lot facing away from Hutchison. You’ll see a welcome sign in front of the entrance to our classroom.

This Thursday will be an organizational meeting to learn the details of the Jr. FLL and FLL programs and to inform the parents and students of all the operational details. I’ll introduce the programs, discuss the calendar and budget. You’ll be able to get your questions answered at the meeting. I believe it will take about an hour to go through everything.

Please RSVP by email to fll@inanimatereason.com if you plan to attend. I would like to have a rough head count of how many people to expect.

Official team meetings will begin the following week. Both programs will begin at 6pm. Jr. FLL will finish at 7:30 and FLL will last until 8:30.

In the meantime, you can download single page PDF files with an overview of each program here:

Jr. FLL (for students aged 6-9)

FLL (for students aged 10-14)

I encourage you to share this and invite other families who might be interested. This is an open, community program for kids who don’t have access to robotics programs at their schools.

Do you want to be notified about community robotics activities in the future? Subcribe to our robotics programs mailing list!

FLL and Jr. FLL Robotics Teams Now Forming!

I hope everyone had as much fun as I did this summer! Our robotics summer camp program finished last week and I’m planning a lot of new activities for this school year.

As of right now, I have after school programs setup at a couple of locations. I still have Wednesday’s open for one more school. If you know of a school that might be interested in an after school robotics program – either a club or an FLL team – please let me know.

I am also in the process of setting up community FLL and Jr. FLL teams in North and South Tampa and the Brandon/Riverview/Valrico areas. For this, I need your help. We are ready to go right now but we need locations to have our weekly meetings. Essentially, we need a classroom sized space where we can hold the meetings one night per week for several hours. During the week, we’ll need to be able to store the competition field. This is a plywood sheet with 2×4 rails. It’s thin, but is is 4×8 feet in size, so it could be leaned against a wall somewhere out of the way for storage. If you know of a location, PLEASE contact me immediately. This is the last thing I need in place before I can kick off these teams. Likely places that might work would be martial arts or other sports facilities, businesses with a large conference room, churches, and local technical or continuing education schools. If you think your child might be interested in joining one of our teams, please reply back and let me know which area and which program you would like to participate.

Anyone who could sponsor our team(s) with a location would receive promotional consideration as a major sponsor for the team. We’ll put their info on the team shirts and printed materials where they’ll be seen by 300-600 (kids and parents) at the tournaments we attend. We’ll also be sure to publicly thank them anytime we have a media opportunity.

The competition season for FIRST LEGO League officially kicks off on September 2nd but it is important to get started now since we need some lead time to get the teams organized and to order materials from US FIRST. Jr. FLL is now underway and the Snack Attack Challenge has been released.

If you know of someone who is interested in starting their own community teams for FLL or Jr. FLL, I’d be happy to sit down with them over a cup of coffee and help them develop a budget and plan so that their team can start on the right foot. I can point them at a number of great resources for rookie coaches too.

Don’t forget, if you think your child might be interested in joining one of our teams, please contact me and let me know which area and which program you would like to participate. Jr. FLL is for kids aged 6 to 9 (as of August 1st). FLL is for kids aged 9 to 14. Teams will be forming in North Tampa, South Tampa, and the Riverview/Brandon/Valrico area.

Our Little GBC Contraption

During week 3 of the Inanimate Reason Robotics summer camp, a group of campers and counselors took on a four stage LEGO Great Ball Chase contraption. By the end of the week, we had it working (sort of). These videos show some of the work in progress. Over the next couple of weeks, we’ll be filling in the holes and making the structure a little sturdier and more reliable. The kids had a blast and really walked away with a sense of accomplishment in getting this working.

LEGO Great Ball Chase Shooter Stage 1 Fail

LEGO Great Ball Chase Stage 2 Ramp

LEGO Great Ball Chase Shooter and Ramp stages

LEGO Great Ball Chase All 4 stages (unedited)

Three NXT Bots Enter the Arena, One Leaves

In our homegrown version of battlebots, I present one of the most popular activities this summer at our Robotics Summer Camps, NXT Battlebots!

The rules are simple – the last robot standing and able to move under its own power wins. In the event more than one robot lives, the ref (me) decides which robot dominated for the round.

This battle is from my North Tampa group this week. I’ll have some more pics and video up in the next few days. Until then, enjoy!

Camp Updates Including New Camp Session Just For Younger Kids!

Update #1: Realizing this is pretty short notice, I’m going to open a session just for kids ages 6 to 8 in Riverview. This will be a three hour camp running from June 27th to July 1st. Pricing is the same as the other camps. I’ve update the Camp Page with the registration details. I will need to have seven kids registered by June 24th to move forward. If the camp doesn’t fill up, full refunds will be given on June 25th. If you register and pay by check, I will hold the check until the camp is confirmed. If you pay online by credit card or Paypal, I will refund your payment in full in the manner paid. Email confirmations will be sent on June 25th or as soon as the camp reaches the minimum enrollment. I will cap enrollment for this camp at 16 campers.

We will be engaged in the Jr. FIRST LEGO League challenge for 2010, Body Forward where the kids will have the opportunity to explore the field of bioengineering, learn about systems in the human body, and then invent something to heal, repair, or enhance one of the systems. They will make models of their inventions using LEGO and will make a project board showing what they learned. We will conduct this activity for three of the five days. The remaining time will be spent engaging in traditional robotics activities with guidance from our staff. Since the Jr. FLL season officially ended on April 30th, we are offering this solely as an enrichment activity.

Update #2: We’ve added online registration links for our camps. You can now register and pay for the camps online. We’ll still need the registration forms because it contains important information and signatures, but you’ll be able to reserve your spot online right up to the day before camp starts.

Update #3: The afternoon session in North Tampa at Messiah Lutheran Church for the week of June 20-24 is now closed. We still have spots available in the morning session.

Camp Shirt Design Is Done!

I approved the final shirt design yesterday for all of the camp shirts. The screen printer will be starting on them Monday so that I’ll have them for the first week of camps. Tell me what you think!

2011 Camp Shirt Design

A Short Survey About Summer Camp

This being our first year hosting a summer camp program, I have to say the approach to the start of summer was very different from what I expected. Finding locations, setting up activities, constructing camp materials, advertising, organizing the camp shirts, finding camp counselors and “other related activities” proved to each have their own unique sets of challenges. Thankfully, now that we’re just over a week away, it has all come together nicely. I’m really looking forward to meeting all of the kids and having a great summer!

I’m very interested in learning more about what campers, both enrolled and prospective, think about what we’ve done so far. I setup a short nine question survey to help me understand what I can do to improve in a couple of key areas. If you enrolled in our camp program OR you even considered it, I would love to know what you think about what we offer. Please take two minutes and let us know.

Click here to take the short survey

LEGOLand Florida Grand Opening Date Set

Set your alerts for October, 15, 2011, the official grand opening day of LEGOLand Florida!

LEGOLand Florida Map

The park features seven themed play areas for all ages. Expected highlights include:

  • The Big Shop One of the largest retail stores in the world featuring LEGO and LEGOLand merchandise. They’ve one-upped Disney. Instead of dropping every ride exit into a shop, they’ve done that for the entire park! 🙂
  • Factory Tour A firsthand look at how LEGO bricks are made from factory to finish
  • Miniland USA Gigantic scale models representing several different iconic cities around the USA including New York, Las Vegas, and Washington D.C. They will also feature many Florida landmarks from Key West, Daytona, and the Kennedy Space Center. You’ll even have the chance to race LEGO Cars around a track!
  • LEGO TECHNIC® Test Track Ride a life-size LEGO TECHNIC roller coaster.
  • Imagination Zone Not only are there games and activities to occupy young and old minds alike, there will be Mindstorms! Build robots using LEGO MINDSTORMS. Naturally, this will be THE highlight of my visit. 🙂
  • Pirate’s Cove Watch the live-action pirate stunt show on the waters of Lake Eloise. I hope they still have water skiing!
  • Land of Adventure I hope this one lives up to the description! Besides a junior roller coaster, there are a number of interactive attractions including laser blasting, 15 foot jumps, and a maze through the Pharaoh’s kingdom.
  • LEGO City Kids can let their imaginations run wild in the miniature city featuring a fire fighter’s academy, driving school, and the flight school (an inverted roller coaster!)

Yes, I am more than a little excited that we finally have a LEGOLand in Florida. I hope they can keep the character of the Florida themepark experience I remember from my many visits to Cypress Gardens.

Here’s a little video for you.