BigEd wrote:
I think the simplest kits are a bit like a "hello world" programming exercise. They get you from knowing nothing and supposing that everything is magic, or beyond you, to the point where you can make a thing. It may be a very simple thing, but it proves a point, and it might be the first step of many.
Think of the very first book a child might read: we don't expect it to be their peak performance, or really even to be an end in itself, but the start of the journey. And it gets you from seeing meaningless marks on paper to the idea that there's language in writing.
If a whole kit was "hello world", then what would the equivalent of loops and conditionals be! [ Not a question. ] I think of books in a completely different category, but I do see your point. I am not disqualifying what you are saying Ed, it is good points.
floobydust wrote:
lots of bang for the buck, but alas, high-level programming languages and endless libraries
I know that folks working in robotics eventually will be using those things to some degree, but that doesn't make it right. I personally do not like endless libraries
Maybe that makes me a bad software engineer?
floobydust wrote:
Needless to say, robotics is of high interest with younger ones... but time will tell how many of them continue down the path. After all, pretty much every kid who ever visited NASA at a young age wanted to be an astronaut!
Yeah, that was me too. I still want to honestly. I look at folks like Richard Garriott, and still have hope even for myself. I have researched different methods of rocket propulsion, I have designed physics simulators for rocket ships and the planets. I once tried to build my own plane from fence poles, wood, and cloth. Ever just look up? Today we are all too focused on looking down, at our cell phones.
BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
the Gilbert Erector Set, which was less a kit and more a set of semi-finished elements that could be combined to make a huge variety of both static and operating devices
And if you attach a 6502 to it, we could call it a robot! See BDD, erector sets were "real toys". Gosh, I'm sure the Statics Engineering class I taught years ago would have benefited greatly by everyone having their own erector set. Typically they settle for Legos, or popsicle sticks. *shrug*
Chad