More on Mousey at the Faire

I know you’re probably sick of seeing Mousey-related posts here. This is the last one, I promise (until the Faire, anyway). This a shot of the bots we’re taking with us, posing in front of the Solarbotics parts bundles we’ll be using in the Workshop.

The motors, battery snap, and SPDT toggle switch will be what’s in the car bundle, those components plus everything else, will be in the full Mousey the Junkbot bundle. The full bundle includes a button/momentary switch, the same kind as is found in a mouse, but with a little metal lever over the button, which makes it SO much easier to attach the bumper. The kit also includes two IR optical sensors, which are a nice backup/alternative to the IR detectors salvaged from an analog mouse.

Digg!

Mousey the Junkbot at the Maker Faire

The Maker Faire is only a few days away (May 19, 20). Yay! (and) Holy crap, I’ve got a lot of stuff to do!

I’m going to be running “Building Mousey the Junkbot” workshops. Actually what most people will likely be building is “My Mousey the Car” (shown here), a quicker, simpler version, with two DC motors, a battery/batt snap, and a toggle switch. There’s going to be a zillion things going on at the Faire. I suspect a lot of people won’t want to take up all their time at this one event. So, they can build the car version there and then add the brains and sensors at home. We’ll have two parts bundles available, a car kit, and one with the parts to make the full Mousey.

We’ll have plenty of dead computer mice on hand, but to further save time, I strongly suggest that folks bring an already prepped mouse. To help with that, I’ve created this brief tutorial. With an already gutted, prepared mouse, all you’ll have to do is solder in the electronics.

Here are some other Mousey-related resources:

Mousey Pages on Street Tech.

Mousey the Junkbot FAQ I just created this doc in preparation for the Faire. It’s the collected Q/A wisdom from several years of Mousey building.

The free Mousey project PDF from Make Vol. 2

The Mousebot Revisited tips and tricks companion piece on Instructables:

Mousey the Junkbot is a TV star!. Mousey on The Colbert Report with Mark Frauenfelder.

Hope to see some of you at the Faire!

Digg!

Alberto Gaitán’s Briliant Colorfield “Remembrancer”

This spring and summer, DC-area art galleries, museums, and art orgs are celebrating the Color Field Movement of the ’50s and ’60s (think: Motherwell, Rothko, Stella), and specifically, the Washington Color School (Gene Davis, Helen Frankenthaler, Morris Louis), which put DC on the significant art movements map. As part of this celebration, the wonderful Curator’s Office micro-gallery is showing an amazing installation piece by one of Street Tech’s own, Alberto Gaitán.

The piece, called Remembrancer, consists of three net-connected robot painters. As data feeds — one local, one national, and one global — pour into the gallery, they’re transposed into art, as paint is deposited onto three monochromatic panels, and into dynamic musical compositions, via three wall-mounted speakers.

The gallery catalog sheet describes some of the ideas behind Remembrancer:

Remembrancer confronts the loss inherent in transformation, the distortions introduced by the medium onto which–and the assumptions in effect when–memory is transcribed, the inevitable simplification of phenomena that accompanies acts of observation, and the spacial, temporal and cultural resonance of events.

That latter bit of “spacial, temporal and cultural resonance of events” was driven home when the Virgina Tech killings happened two days after the show’s opening. Ominously, the local canvas is colored red. Overwhelmed by data traffic on that day, it squeezed out two guillotine-like triangles, dripping gore. Perhaps a happier “accident” can be found on the blue, national, panel where its proximity to the gallery’s air conditioning vent has made all of the paint deposits shiver nervously on their way down.

For the geek artists (and engineers) in the audience, the mechanisms that render the art might be as interesting, and maybe as poignant, as the art itself. Alberto used the Make Controller, an iconic object of the current anyone-can-play high-tech/DIY craze, “canvases” gridded off like geeky graph paper, beautifully printed on Komatex/Sintra, an expanded PVC material popular in robotics, peristaltic pumps that look like they were lifted from an OR, and paint-laden “carboys” suspended from the ceiling, that look like they might be from the recovery room. Gorgeous little robot carts complete the tech, with precision-machined gears and rack and pinion drive mechanics, stepper motors, and segmented cable guides that look both serpentine and like something from a LEGO Mindstorms set. As the gallery’s curator, Andrea Pollan, so perfectly put it: It’s “Frankenstein lab meets Walter Reed hospital room.”

The robots lay down their paint nozzles at the end of this week. The completed work will be up until May 26th. If you’re in DC, you should definitely stop by and see it. The Curator’s Office is at 1515 14th St. NW.

Read the Washington Post review here.
Read the WP Express piece here.
Alberto’s Remembrancer Flickr set can be found here.
Find out more about the ColorField.remix here.
After the jump, see more pics of the piece, including the equipment table and the Breadboard (with call outs). The Breadboard, the installation’s control electronics, was built on an actual breadboard ($2 from Target).

Digg!

Cool Vibrobot with Picaxe Brain

This is a strange, but nifty combination of robotech. BEAMbots are frequently analog-only and vibrobots (that get their motility by shaking their tails feathers) are some of the “crudest” (as in: How do I steer this crazy thing!) of BEAMbots. But this think-outside-the-bot builder combined vibrobot movement in a solar powered bot that uses a Picaxe 08M microcontroller (MCU). Obviously, the MCU can’t direct movement, but it monitors power and turns on the vibro-motor at a given threshold. Its eyes also light up and it can play some tones and music (Happy Birthday) as programmed. Dig those cute legs made out of diodes!

[Via Make]

Digg!

Make Podcast on BEAMbots with Free PDF

This week’s Make: Weekend Projects podcast is about BEAM robots. Bre shows you my Trimet project from Make Vol. 6 and a SolarBug kit from PagerMotors.com. He also plugs our pal Dave Hrynkiw’s awesome Junkbots, Bugbots, and Bots on Wheels. As part of the podcast, Make has made available the PDF to my BEAM projects piece from Make Vol. 6.

This means that all of my robot articles from Make are now available online (links to PDFs):
Mousey the Junkbot
Pummer, Dude!
Two BEAMbots: Trimet and Solarroller

Digg!

The Fine Art of Mouse Dissection

If you’re coming to the Maker Faire and are going to take my Building Mousey the Junkbot Workshop, to save you time on your bot build (and therefore give you more time to enjoy the Faire), I recommend you eviscerate your own mouse to bring a prepped one, ready to install its new innards. Just to be clear, we’re talking about a mouse of the computer kind, not of the biological variety (smart ass). I’ve written a short guide to Mouse Dissection which should tell you all you need to know.

See you at the Faire! It’s shaping up to be one hell of a nerdfest.

Digg!

Mousey the Junkbot FAQ

In preparation for my Mousey workshops at the Maker Faire, I’ve put together a Mousey FAQ with all of the Q/A that’s crossed my transom in the last couple of years. Above are captures from the video of Mousey (and Mark Frauenfelder) on The Colbert Report.

Digg!

Make:Philly Mousebot Pics

Last month, Make:Philly had another one of their gatherings where they get together to build cool stuff. For that meeting, they included a Mousey building contest. Here’s a link to the pics on their website. Also, one of Make:Philly’s members, Jef Wilkins, has a bunch of pics in his Flickr sets. The images above, showing four very different interpretations of the Herbie/Mousey circuit, where taken by Jef. Not sure who won the contest, but my chips are on Mighty Mousebot. I love the way he’s holding one of the eyestalks in his fist. He’s badass. These are all badass. Nice job, kids!

Thanks, Jef!

Digg!

Mousey’s Smarter Nephew

Don’t you hate it when the next generation shows up its elders? While trawling Flickr for pics of Mousey the Junkbot builds, I bumped into this mousebot, one built from an optical mouse. It repurposes the optics for dead-reckoning navigation. It also has an IR sensor, bump sensors, a serial radio link, charge-monitor, and self-charger contacts that mate with a base station. Total cost: about US$30 in parts. Maybe I’ll try and track the builder down and get him to tell us more.

BTW: The original Mousey is making the rounds. He just got back yesterday from a trip to an art museum in Chicago, where he was representing MAKE in a show about the history of DIY. Ah… to be young and globetrotting…

Digg!

Robot Fest 2007

This Saturday, April 28th, Robot Fest 2007 will take place at the Historical Electronics Museum in Linthicum, Maryland (near BWI airport). Looks like all sorts of good, dirty, robot fun, with a number of local FIRST robotics teams, members of the Girls Robot Club, LEGO Mindstorms clubs, a bomb bot, engineers working on medical robotics, art robotics, and a lot more. Check out the Robot Fest site for full details and photos of last year’s event. The event is free, BTW.