Many thanks for the warm welcome. I've been on a Tuesday night tour
and am dropping into the space in the afternoon every so often. I'm
jolly easy to spot thanks to being rather tall with an unusually long
red beard. Do come and say hello if you'd like to help get
http://Opendrawer.org
up and running in the workshop. I've got as far as getting a couple of
servos swiveling under control of processing. I'd like to start
tinkering with materials but haven't had any training on power tools
yet. I'm guessing I shouldn't just blunder into the workshop with my
vague memory of using a lathe in metalwork class about a quarter of a
century ago?
http://edburton.net
On May 20, 2:43 pm, Ed Burton <
e...@edburton.net> wrote:
> I'm embarking on a projecthttp://Opendrawer.orgto develop an
> affordable open-source hardware+software robotic platform for
> investigating simulated drawing behavior. Opendrawer focuses on a
> distinctively anthropomorphic approach to drawing: Actuated by elastic
> antagonistic muscle pairs such a robot will, like a child, rely
> extensively on visual and kinaesthetic feedback between eye, arm,
> drawing and subject to dynamically self-organize embodied drawing
> behaviors. There's some theoretical depth behind the motivation of the
> project dating back to work on simulating children's drawing behavior
> that I was doing in the 90's (
http://web.archive.org/web/20030624231545/www.cea.mdx.ac.uk/CEA/Exter...
> ). I come from a creative programming background (I later madehttp://
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soda_Constructoramongst other things)