Walking shopping cart

Posted on 10/04/2008 by GroG
Modified on: 13/09/2018
Project
Press to mark as completed
Introduction
This is an automatic import from our previous community platform. Some things can look imperfect.

If you are the original author, please access your User Control Panel and update it.

A study in automating less glamorous aspects of society. Carlos was a college kinetic sculpture project. I was interested in the concept of automating aspects of society that were considered not so "glamorous". Robotics are often used in environments which are considered dangerous to humans. Deep sea exploration, nuclear cleanup and volcanism are some of the "higher profile" adverse environments which robots are used. My question was, "What about other dangerous or hazardous ...


Walking shopping cart

A study in automating less glamorous aspects of society.

Carlos was a college kinetic sculpture project. I was interested in the concept of automating aspects of society that were considered not so "glamorous". Robotics are often used in environments which are considered dangerous to humans. Deep sea exploration, nuclear cleanup and volcanism are some of the "higher profile" adverse environments which robots are used. My question was, "What about other dangerous or hazardous areas?". For example, homeless people live in extremely dangerous environments. Shouldn't there be automated equipment used by this strata of society? So, for this project I chose to implement an automated walking, homeless shopping cart. I imagine now, to carry this project to completion I should have given the controls to someone who was actually living on the streets near the university. There was a large homeless population near the campus, and there would have been plenty of opportunity. Unfortunately, I had to disassemble the project for parts before this happened.

 

More pictures here.

Krikey, not used to this wacky editor in drupal ....... alright  - i'm done....

Walk around and push a shopping cart

  • Actuators / output devices: homebrew h-bridge, rc servos
  • Control method: radio controlled - no micro controller - at least not this time
  • CPU: none
  • Operating system: na
  • Power source: 2 12 volt car batteries
  • Programming language: none
  • Sensors / input devices: none
  • Target environment: outdoor, city
LikedLike this to see more

Spread the word

Flag this post

Thanks for helping to keep our community civil!


Notify staff privately
It's Spam
This post is an advertisement, or vandalism. It is not useful or relevant to the current topic.

You flagged this as spam. Undo flag.Flag Post