by NovaOne » Mon Nov 10, 2008 12:00 am
by NovaOne
Mon Nov 10, 2008 12:00 am
Do we need a more private and focussed forum for this, or are people now bored cos it's too hard
I personally think I entered into the Biped/Humanoid field a little prematurely, given the fact I only have basic knowledge of key robotics disciplines (programming being my Achilles heel).
I feel attracted to simpler challenges while learning programming. So I may stray into the areas of mini-sumo, 2-wheeled balance, micromouse, Robot Vision (and moving house) etc, while I am learning. But I am NOT about to "disassemble" my RN or RB , abandon Robosavvy and never look back...........
I had hoped as others have that we are not far from the next important step in the hobbyist biped world, that is, true closed-loop balanced walking, or as limor calls it "real biped walking". StuartL has made real progress along those lines and, there seem to be quite a few other people out there that have already achieved it to some extent.....looking at the papers coming out of the universities.
I liked the thread started by StuartL on
IK HowTo a while back, but the fact that it has not continued and expanded on by others, really highlighted how much potential interest there was in this key "Hard" problem , so far.
This forum is about technical breakthroughs achieved by hobbyists and few researchers.
The general slow down of higher-level projects being posted here, maybe because, most of people will not post information freely to others if it has cost them a large amount of time and effort and or is commercially valuable. Or casual browsers may be lost or intimidated by the advanced threads. The former possibility is a dead-end however the later can be dealt with, since, it goes without saying that it is up to us to provide a progression into the “Hard Stuff”, by helping those on lower steps than us, up to our level, but first you need to have lots of people on the ground floor wanting to get the top. This may also be the problem, since RoboSavvy gets lots of casual browsers visiting on the ground floor, but they show very little interest in wanting to go the next level probably as i-Bot says, “cos it's too hard”?
A problem is only perceived as hard if you can’t break it down into easier bits.
Do we need a more private and focussed forum for this, or are people now bored cos it's too hard
I personally think I entered into the Biped/Humanoid field a little prematurely, given the fact I only have basic knowledge of key robotics disciplines (programming being my Achilles heel).
I feel attracted to simpler challenges while learning programming. So I may stray into the areas of mini-sumo, 2-wheeled balance, micromouse, Robot Vision (and moving house) etc, while I am learning. But I am NOT about to "disassemble" my RN or RB , abandon Robosavvy and never look back...........
I had hoped as others have that we are not far from the next important step in the hobbyist biped world, that is, true closed-loop balanced walking, or as limor calls it "real biped walking". StuartL has made real progress along those lines and, there seem to be quite a few other people out there that have already achieved it to some extent.....looking at the papers coming out of the universities.
I liked the thread started by StuartL on
IK HowTo a while back, but the fact that it has not continued and expanded on by others, really highlighted how much potential interest there was in this key "Hard" problem , so far.
This forum is about technical breakthroughs achieved by hobbyists and few researchers.
The general slow down of higher-level projects being posted here, maybe because, most of people will not post information freely to others if it has cost them a large amount of time and effort and or is commercially valuable. Or casual browsers may be lost or intimidated by the advanced threads. The former possibility is a dead-end however the later can be dealt with, since, it goes without saying that it is up to us to provide a progression into the “Hard Stuff”, by helping those on lower steps than us, up to our level, but first you need to have lots of people on the ground floor wanting to get the top. This may also be the problem, since RoboSavvy gets lots of casual browsers visiting on the ground floor, but they show very little interest in wanting to go the next level probably as i-Bot says, “cos it's too hard”?
A problem is only perceived as hard if you can’t break it down into easier bits.
Last edited by NovaOne on Tue Nov 18, 2008 6:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.