2006 challenge kid nano robot
I'm glad the book has robot building instructions because I have no idea if the kids are going to figure out this robot by themselves in just a couple of hours. Posted by Christine on July 3, 9: Today's challenge was more fun to recreate. The hole in the wall was just a gap in the cardboard boxes. The kids discovered that if they were in just the right spot, they could peak around the boxes and see the basket.
We added an extra box just inside the entrance to block that view. Posted by Christine on July 4, Posted by Christine on July 5, Posted by Christine on July 8, It's Mayan Adventure week 2! Posted by Christine on August 31, 9: Use of this website is subject to the following disclaimers and Terms And Conditions.
This page contains an archive of all entries posted to Creative Kids Blog in the Lego Robot category. They are listed from oldest to newest. Learning is the previous category. Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives. Weekly Scoring One challenge is getting the kids to focus on all four areas that are part of the First Lego League challenge. Robot Competition If you're interested in Lego Mindstorms robots, here's a chance to see a robot competition over the web.
Mayan Day One Today's challenge is to navigate through a tunnel with two left turns, sit on a pressure plate for 30 seconds and then return out through the tunnel. Mayan Day Three Today's challenge was more fun to recreate. Mayan Day Four I'm not sure about today's challenge. The only project I can think of that big would be an interstellar spaceship.
Australia could do a fairly large one and the World could probably do one half the size of the moon! Or else we could build a space elevator. Roland January 20, at Tom Mazanec January 22, at Of course we do! We're just wasting them all on wars, car accidents, smoking, obesity and prisons.
We've got our priorities wrong. If you really devoted millions of people and trillions of dollars, we could have a starship within a few decades. Think how much technology will advance in that time. Roland January 22, at Recent Posts Nano-channels for molecule delivery - and construction?
Recent Comments asian bridal on Nano-channels for molecule delivery - and construction? Aurelia on Nano-channels for molecule delivery - and construction? John on Nano-channels for molecule delivery - and construction? The first stage was a circular earth formation; the second consisted of timber being added to the circle; and the third stage was constructed of bluestones.
Two hundred to years later, the sarsen stones were added. These are taller than the bluestones and form the upside-down "u" now seen. Now, here is your Stonehenge Challenge: Calculate how much effort was required to build the full artifact man-hours, ergs, horsepower, or whatever method you choose.
Determine what fraction of all available effort in that early society was used to build this structure. Apply that fraction to the total of all available effort in our modern society to arrive at a Comparable Project Potential. Conceive a new project that would use approximately the same amount of available effort.
Then tell us about your project: How would it be accomplished and what would it achieve? Comments You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post. Hey, that's a really good idea. That would mean either: Let's think about it: At least, because the population will grow during that time The only project I can think of that big would be an interstellar spaceship.