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I built Small & Cute Robot arms from Scratch for my ROS 2 mobile robot. I'll probably make new smaller & cuter version of my robot with these small arms. submitted by /u/martincerven [link] [Kommentare]
Multiplayer DIY robot where you learn mechanics and engineering...600+ parts and 6 hour build time. It has custom electronics, bb gun mechanism and piezo equipped plates for hit detection. You controll it via mobile app and can have up to 8 tanks in multiplayer game submitted by /u/Iron_Fleet_Support [link] [Kommentare]
The Seeed team will be in Garching-Hochbrück near Munich tomorrow for a hands-on workshop with reBot Arm, our fully open-source robotic arm. Try it in person, ask technical questions, meet robotics folks, and grab some pizza with us. Limited spots: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/robotics-builders-meetup-hands-on-with-rebot-arm-tickets-1990578698472 submitted by /u/MiuoChar [link] [Kommentare]
Sorry for the slow pace of the video, but I figured that seeing each visualizer perform the same path makes them more intuitive. All of these visualizers are rendered on a meta quest 3 using OpenXR. submitted by /u/RoboLord66 [link] [Kommentare]
Where should I learn? What programming language should I learn for robotics and where should I learn it from? Are there any free resources available??? submitted by /u/Jumpy_Muffin6244 [link] [Kommentare]
Hey all, I'm a robotics engineer by training turned ML/AI engineer because of passion right after school. I want to start combining these skills together and I think a competition is the best way of doing it. Here's an example of a challenge I'm talking about to set expectations : https://www.intrinsic.ai/events/ai-for-industry-challenge Anyone up for this? L.E.1. I'm based in Europe. I think online only competitions would be easiest to start with to get momentum going, then if the results are worth it, we can consider meeting in person if it makes sense. L.E.2. I don't have the next challenge in mind yet, I'm open to suggestions. submitted by /u/Due_Pickle1627 [link] [Kommentare]
I'm researching how teams build datasets for robot learning and I'm curious what the biggest challenges are in practice. From what I've seen so far, collecting robotics data seems very different from standard computer vision datasets because you have to deal with sensor synchronization, demonstrations, real-world edge cases, and often much smaller datasets. One thing I'm still trying to understand is where most teams spend the majority of their time. For people working on robot learning, manipulation, navigation, or autonomous systems: Is data collection the main bottleneck? Is annotation and labeling the difficult part? Do you rely more on simulation or real-world data? What would you improve if you could rebuild your data pipeline from scratch? I'd love to hear some real-world experiences. submitted by /u/Vane1st [link] [Kommentare]