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We've seen Segways built partly from Legos before, but a Segway built entirely from the Legos in a standard NXT 2.0 set? That's something special.
28 thoughts on “ LEGO Printer Built Without NXT parts ” jacubillo says: June 2, 2010 at 9:03 am brilliant. Report comment. Reply. Stevetronics says: June 2, 2010 at 9:10 am Just a ...
Here is a telepresence robot that uses an Android device and LEGO NXT parts. [Wolfgang] had an extra phone on hand and decided to put it to good use. The Mindstorm parts make it really easy to prod… ...
Lego builder Bre Burns has constructed a fully functional pinball table entirely out of 15,000 Lego bricks and it ... down to the electronics (powered by Lego Mindstorm NXT parts), the rubber ...
Following in the likes of MakerBot and RepRap, Will Gorman at BattleBricks has created a new 3D printer that you can build yourself. There's only one caveat: it's made of Lego. The MakerLegoBot is ...
News has been percolating over the internet regarding the new LEGO Mindstorms NXT set, called NXT 2.0, due out this August. If you’re not savvy to Mindstorms, don’t make the mistake of ...
If this LEGO Mindstorm NXT 2.0 robot were any more technologically advanced, ... servos, and other moveable parts that you can program using Mac- and PC-compatible software.
Pulito even uses a multiplexing system to get more sensors onto the LEGO NXT without adding more ports, an admirable hack even on its own. For more photos, construction details, and videos check ...
A lego NXT device created by Philo then sweeps the red laser over the object and a webcam feeds all that info into the David laser scanner software to produce 3D LDraw files for creating lego ...
Lego Mindstorms NXT Manufacturer: Lego System requirements: 256MB RAM, 300MB hard drive, USB port, CD-ROM, Bluetooth (optional), 1024x768 display, Mac OS X 10.3.9 or later (600MHz G3, G4, or G5 ...