Love the way this is written with "questions" interspersed throughout to explain more about the steps taken. Adds good context that makes it very easy to follow.
Oh man, I had both the NXT and the original Mindstorms Lego robotics kit as a kid, brings back so many memories. I mostly made robots that tried to chase the cat around while trying to avoid falling down the stairs (half the time unsuccessfully). I even tried at one point using Java to develop programs for them, as there was a small community of people doing so online, and even some books at the local library.
Reading this article provides some great insights into the innards of the NXT which I never knew of back them (and probably also could not entirely comprehend back when I was young). This article also reminded me that I still have the NXT and all the parts sitting around in a box somewhere; maybe I should try and dig them out and make something with them, though I don't have any ideas for what I should make exactly.
My first ever programming was with the original brick, I made a scanner with the light sensor and a terrible python script that took the values from the serial port and turned them into a bitmap.
> though I don't have any ideas for what I should make exactly.
That was the best part! You'd turn the box of Lego over and dump it all on the ground and sit down and start building and then suddenly you'd get inspired and an idea would pop into your head and flow mode would engage and you'd lose the next couple of hours just building whatever. Eventually mom/dad/the babysitter would pull you away for food, and maybe you'd talk them into bringing your creation to the dining table so you'd actually eat, but either way, just losing time to building things definitely formed my personality and forged my identity growing up.
I have kept all my favorite sets. They don't take up much space. Just two 24x24x24” boxes. Maybe a big deal if you are moving internationally, but I have always been able to find space for them, even in some very small homes.
According to the CSS of the page, the font is "IBM VGA 9x16".
No idea about the color scheme but it's nice.
Unrelated to any of this, this font reminds of an old Turbo Pascal program I wrote years ago (decades now) to extract a VGA font from the computer's ROM and use the character bitmaps in my own graphics programs. Nice memory I would not have had if not for your question, so thank you!
Reading this article provides some great insights into the innards of the NXT which I never knew of back them (and probably also could not entirely comprehend back when I was young). This article also reminded me that I still have the NXT and all the parts sitting around in a box somewhere; maybe I should try and dig them out and make something with them, though I don't have any ideas for what I should make exactly.
That was the best part! You'd turn the box of Lego over and dump it all on the ground and sit down and start building and then suddenly you'd get inspired and an idea would pop into your head and flow mode would engage and you'd lose the next couple of hours just building whatever. Eventually mom/dad/the babysitter would pull you away for food, and maybe you'd talk them into bringing your creation to the dining table so you'd actually eat, but either way, just losing time to building things definitely formed my personality and forged my identity growing up.
No idea about the color scheme but it's nice.
Unrelated to any of this, this font reminds of an old Turbo Pascal program I wrote years ago (decades now) to extract a VGA font from the computer's ROM and use the character bitmaps in my own graphics programs. Nice memory I would not have had if not for your question, so thank you!