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Robotics education in the Gorge got new wind last fall when Google gave $43,000 to two groups in The Dalles for Lego Mindstorms. Kids ages 6 to 18 use the kits to build robots out of sensors, motors ...
Now Lego Education is launching a new robot learning system, dubbed WeDo 2.0, to help teach kids about engineering, technology, and coding.
The intent is to familiarize adults with concepts in programming and encourage them to work with kids in a Lego robotics competition.
The LEGO Pixelbot 3000 represents a significant milestone in the fusion of LEGO construction, robotics, and AI technology.
There's a new STEM option in town. The Robot Inventor kit can be turned into five robots, which can play basketball, walk, and shoot darts at intruders.
Danny Benedettelli's next step in his Cyclops project is a functional robot which he can wirelessly control by wearing an exoskeleton made up of Legos.
For Bill Tinney, a Seattle-area Flash software developer, his ticket into the program was his determination to program Mindstorms NXT robots on Macintosh computers.
“WeDo Robotics” is for ages 7-10. Lego aficionados will get to build and program models using Technic bricks motors, battery boxes, WeDo software and sensors.
Learn to code with this Robot Inventor kit, now $287.99 in Lego's Black Friday sale. But with retirement on the way you'll have to grab it before it's gone.
The school’s robotics team was chosen to compete at the FIRST LEGO League World Festival in Houston from April 17 to 20.
In 1999, Lego introduced Mindstorms, a line of software-laden robotics toys that allowed the bold to create programmable machines using Lego products.