Silicon Valley keenly awaits latest Lego robot kit
MARTHA MENDOZA, AP
1 day ago
1 day ago
SAN
JOSE, California (AP) — Few are more excited about Lego's new
Mindstorms sets rolling out next month than Silicon Valley engineers.
Many
of them were drawn to the tech sector by the flagship kits that came on
the market in 1998, introducing computerized movement to the
traditional snap-together toy blocks and allowing
the young innovators to build their first robots. Now, 15 years later,
those robot geeks are entrepreneurs and designers, and the colorful
plastic bricks have an outsized influence in their lives.
Techies
tinker at Lego play stations in workplaces. Engineers mentor
competitive Lego League teams. Designers use them to mock up larger
projects ideas. And executives stand Lego creations
on their desks alongside family photos.
"Everyone
I work with played with them as children. We sit around talking Lego.
It's a shared common experience," said Travis Schuh, who reaches into
his bin of plastic blocks when he
needs a quick prototype at the Silicon Valley medical robotic firm
where he works.
The new Mindstorms sets, on sale Sept. 1, are simpler for the younger crowd and more versatile for sophisticated users than two earlier versions.
The
sets are designed for kids over 10 and make it easy to build basic,
remote-controlled robots, including a cobra-like snake that snaps Lego
brick fangs. Some shoot balls, others drive
along color-coded lines.
But for $349, far more expensive than typical building toys, customers get a much more complex and powerful system.
"There's
actually a lot of engineering that goes into Lego bricks and the
systems you can prototype out of them are pretty sophisticated," says
Stanford University engineering professor
Christian Gerdes, who uses them in his classroom.
Professional
hackers will also find plenty to do with the new Mindstorms, as the
open source software uses Linux for the first time, and controller apps
are integrated for tablets and
mobile phones.
San
Francisco-based software engineer Will Gorman is one of those adult
users. He has torn apart Mindstorms kits to create a Lego toilet
flusher, a Wii-playing robot that bowled a perfect
game and a Lego Mars Curiosity Rover.
"I
don't consider myself an adult really," said the 36-year-old father of
two last week, setting up yet another creation on a table in a sunny
Redwood City library overlooking San Francisco's
bay wetlands.
ProtoTank
co-founder Adam Ellsworth, whose headquarters are on the third floor of
TechShop San Francisco, says, "there is a culture of design in the
Silicon Valley, and Lego bricks are
how so many of us started."
"This
place is just one big Lego station," he added, raising his voice above
the buzz of laser cutters and 3-D printers. "Taking an idea, a concept,
and finding the right way to turn
it into something real, that's fundamentally what you're doing with
Lego bricks."
Denmark-based
Lego first sold their plastic bricks 55 years ago, and watched them
grow into one of the world's most popular toys. But company officials
say Mindstorms, designed for children
but quickly snapped up by adults, changed their market.
"In
the last 15 years, we have worked hard to balance the needs and wants
of this shadow market while at the same time engaging kids," said
Michael McNally, a brand director at LEGO Systems,
Inc.
Kellen
Asercion, a Stanford University engineering graduate student, first
snapped Lego bricks together around the time he started kindergarten,
and he was still building when he graduated
high school.
"Lego sets are almost single-handedly responsible for my interest in engineering," he said.
Many
Bay Area engineers also grew up competing in the First Lego League,
which also launched in 1998 with 200 teams. Since then the league has
expanded — last year more than 280,000 children
around the world, ages 6-18, participated.
Organizers expect 600 teams participating in Northern California this autumn.
"We
have a culture that only celebrates superheroes in the worlds of
entertainment and sports. We need to create superheroes in the world of
innovation," said Dean Kamen, who founded
FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology),
which includes the First Lego League.
Nagy
Hakim first played with Mindstorms at a robotics summer camp when he
was in 6th grade. Since then, the college-bound 18-year-old from Santa
Clara, California, has joined — and even
mentored — Lego leagues.
Is this something he's going to grow out of?
"Time
will tell," laughs Hakim. This fall he heads to Olin College of
Engineering in Boston, where professors posit theoretical Lego problems,
students are encouraged to mentor Lego teams
and the library stocks Mindstorms kits.
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