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Scotty Allen
Scotty Allen

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If you had a (small) army of robots, what would you make them do?

I recently bought these, and I'm working on getting them working.  They have a ton of hand and arm dexterity, force sensors in the fingertips, and some good onboard cameras.  But no control software.

So what should I have them do for a first video?  I have a few ideas, but I'd love to hear yours!

Keep in mind that control loops are HARD, so I'm preferably looking for things that are either simple tasks that don't rely on knowledge of the world around it (like dancing), or things that it can fail spectacularly and hilariously at (like trying to make a drink).

And shhh - this is a secret still, so don't go spilling the beans outside of Patreon!

If you had a (small) army of robots, what would you make them do?

Comments

I just want to remind you that telling people not to do something usually has the exact opposite effect than expected. I'm sure most people here are cool, but there will always be exceptions and saying you don't want it just gave them a reason to do it. As for the robots, I don't know. I find humanoid robots a bit pointless outside of maybe the entertainment sector. I can only quote the internet rule 86: "If it exists, you can play Bad Apple on it."

nezu

Have one robot solder something

Chris Tatarian

Make them play 'Rock Paper Scissors Lizard Spock"

Jon Rutlen

Have them administer COVID tests

Samurai1200

you might like this: https://www.wevolver.com/article/welding-with-oculus-vr-glasses

John Scherer

On the surface, Home Assistant can be pretty simple. But if you dive under the covers, it can be super complex, well, as complex as you want it to be. The MQTT stuff is fun for adding sensor that would otherwise not be possible. Add a database and some math and you can combine the data from multiple sensors and create virtual sensor that you can then create rule from. It would be fun to have one work as a "camera operator" of sorts. Especially for things like welding, where getting close for a better view is not so great for you personally. Maybe some temp sensors, thermal sensors, etc. The problem you have is figuring out the motion control system would be separate from HA. Any details on the robots yet? I'd love to look their control systems.

John Scherer

I use Home Assistant too! I use it mostly for interfacing ESP based LED strips and dimmers for various accent lighting around the shop (the leds strips under the stair lips and edison bulbs incorporated into the shelves right now). But I should take a deeper look into it...

Scotty Allen

Good call - Sam LookMumNoComputer is awesome!

Scotty Allen

Ooh, I like the Macarena idea! They swivel at the waist, too, which would go well with the whole 90 degree jump turn thing...

Scotty Allen

Do an out to of them doing the Macarena or some repetitive dance like that.

BartLanz

you should reach out to Sam of LookMumNoComputer, and see if you two can make a music video 😂

matthew katzenstein

I use Home Assistant for all my home automation needs, it’s really one of the best platforms for this at sensor-fusion. I think I would try find a way to interface these robots with Home Assistant and maybe even some MQTT for sensor data.

John Scherer

Interesting idea! The white gloves do go with the white of the robot...

Scotty Allen

Maybe a Rome traffic policeman, they have a somewhat unique style e.g.: https://youtu.be/AXhUe86iMCY

Peter Houghton

I like the Fruit Ninja idea! I don’t really know how easily damageable they are yet either 😁. But I do feel reasonably confident I can solve the likely way they’ll break (snapped cable). So it’s worth a shot. Also, I have three, so… spare parts? Not sure how fast they move yet though.

Scotty Allen

I like the kung fu sound effects idea! And light sabers could be fun too. I was thinking a sword duel earlier, but light sabers is probably better.

Scotty Allen

Fruit Ninja, give them a Katana, get some fruits, like an Ananas 🍍 or Watermelon 🍉, chop chop. Could be fun, not sure how easily damageable they are. Or give them a phone and they'll plug a cable into it to charge it.

snils

Three robots lined up, almost Kraftwerk style.... hmmm.... Add in a conveyor belt and do a sushi prep line? That sort of approach might be easier on the programming side since each robot needs to do one distinct thing, but every step needs to line up perfectly.

Warren

Hand to hand combat skits. No actual contact or damage but techniques with Kung Fu impact sounds? Or maybe a lightsaber duel skit? Or the see, hear, speak no evil gestures?

Darth Mole

I just wanna say - your ideas are far better than mine were. Please keep them coming!

Scotty Allen

Larry, Moe and Curly skit.

Tyghe Sean

I love all these ideas Kyle! Hot glue sounds fun, as does washing/dropping dishes. I like the idea of turning clay pots, but man is that messy. I'd be worried about getting clay in places the sun don't shine. Places in the robots the sun doesn't shine, that is :)

Scotty Allen

Yeah, that's an interesting idea. Getting it to actually work sounds HARD though. I'm pretty sure you'd have to use visual feedback, even when juggling with just one robot. But having it try and fail spectacularly on the other hand - totally doable :)

Scotty Allen

I like this - would be pretty funny to have them lined up next to each other in the kitchen... And yeah, I definitely want to play up the humor on this, because I'm definitely not going to succeed in getting them to do something impressive 😂 Not in an initial video anyway...

Scotty Allen

This is a bit off the wall but I recently watched that Pee-wee Herman "breakfast machine" scene where a Rube Goldberg-like machine makes breakfast. Maybe there's something that can be done where the robots coordinate with eachother in some sequential way (i.e. each robot does something then passes it on to the next) in order to produce some kind of result. These robots are kinda funny looking, so I think it'd be good if they try to do something funny.

Warren

First thing that came to mind is attempting to juggle, starting out with one object and hopefully adding more until failure. In the same vein, moving onto trying to toss a ball between two robots when it is time to add visual feedback into the loop.

Winston R. Milling

When people think of robots, they often first think of automating repetitive, manual tasks, but truth is those things usually require a surprising amount of operator intervention. I think it would be fascinating to make a video with some hilarious fails that also highlights exactly how it's not as easy to put a robot to work as we sometimes believe. All the little adjustments we make to our grip or following a line with a certain degree of variability in it, or cutting this far from the end of something. It's harder than it looks to replicate! Hilarious fail tasks are fun: Washing dishes or cars come to mind, or little maker tasks like hot glueing. Maybe even turning clay pots so that they turn out "the same"? Maybe it'll actually do a good job, who knows??

Kyle

Ooh, this could be fun. Particularly with the recent craze of creator boxing. Lord knows _I'm_ not getting in the ring any time soon...

Scotty Allen

Rock'em Sock'em Robots. Use simple control scheme with a RC controller and use force sensors to measure a hit and have the head spin around or something when it lands a good blow.

Nicholas H.


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