Lego debuts Smart Brick and Smart Play system that reacts
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Any Lego master builders out there that have a large amount of Lego bricks they need to sort might be interested in this fantastic Lego sorting plant, which has been created to demonstrate a factory’s manufacturing execution system. The Lego builders ...
The folks at BrickIt were commissioned by a company called Dynaway to build this miniature, but impressive, Lego sorting factory to demonstrate the firm’s manufacturing execution system. And lucky for us, they created a mesmerizing video of it in action.
LEGO enthusiast and YouTuber Daniel West has created what he believes to be the next evolution of LEGO sorting machines. His creation is the first of its kind and uses AI and Neural Networks to sort any kind LEGO brick — something that's never been done.
Why it matters: For unleashing creativity across all ages, it's hard to beat Lego, the latest proof of which is given by Daniel West, creator of the Universal LEGO Sorting Machine. Combining AI, Lego bricks, motors and a Raspberry Pi, among other things ...
Lithuania-based tech startup Sort A Brick has launched what it says is“the world's first automated industrial-grade system for recognizing and sorting pre-owned LEGO bricks”, setting a new standard for the reuse and upcycling of one of the world's most ...
I don't know about you, but when I was kid I had boxes and boxes of LEGO that my parents bought me to keep me out of their hair. This LEGO wasn't sorted in the slightest, in fact it probably couldn't of been more jumbled if you tried. That's when I needed ...
Anybody who has a penchant for LEGO probably has a bucket or two of messily mixed brick somewhere in their abode—like sands through the hourglass, so are the pieces of sets once destroyed by los gatos. But it’s the 21st century, which means sorting ...
Sort A Brick, a new Lithuania-based startup, is using AI to bring order to consumers’ dusty boxes of mismatched Lego bricks. The technology can identify and restore complete Lego sets from jumbles of old bricks, making them easier to sell on secondhand ...
What’s the worst thing about LEGO? Most would agree that it’s the fact that those bright and colorful pieces of ABS are somehow the most evil thing that can come between your bare feet and solid ground. [Unnecessary Inventions] have done a one-eighty ...
The latest in a long line of LEGO Harry Potter sets is a brick replica of the iconic Sorting Hat. Introduced in the first book of the series, the Hat sorts Hogwarts students into their respective houses: Gryffindor, Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw, and Slytherin.