Skip to main content

Posts

Next Generation Transport System

Recent posts

Learn More about Your Basic Electronics

The Most Common Basic Electronic Components These are the most common components Resistors Capacitors LEDs Transistors Inductors Integrated Circuits I didn’t understand the  resistor  in the beginning. It didn’t seem to do anything! It was just there, consuming power. But with time, I learned that the resistor is actually extremely useful. You’ll see resistors everywhere. And as the name suggests, they  resist  the current. But you are probably wondering: What do I use it for? You use the resistor to control the voltages and the currents in your circuit. By  using Ohm’s law . Let’s say you have a 9V battery and you want to turn on a  Light-Emitting Diode (LED) . If you connect the battery directly to the LED, LOTS of current will flow through the LED! Much more that the LED can handle. So the LED will become very hot and burn out after a short amount of time. But – if you put a resistor in series with the LED, you can...

You can do a lot!! Make it All!!

Have you ever come across a talking Robot before? This robots even talk exceptionally well and they help make things work on time.And they even assist in getting several task done in time.Do you know you can make yours! Its without any argument that you can do exceptionally anything as much as you can imagine. from programming artificial intelligence to making non living things interact with each others and especially teach each others, all this are possible if only you can be open-minded and think crystal clearly. And funny enough you have all that you might need. Starting from the Arduino Microcontroller to the largest 3D printer, that you can affordably get. You can make a lot of things because Just You can Do it! I will encourage you to read more about our article on Arduino to have me understanding of what you can do with it.Good luck!

Meet Our Northern Hero

Seventeen-year-old secondary school student, Ismaila Suraju, has built a planting machine and a locally-made power generator that uses water and batteries, among others. They young boy who says his next target is to build an aeroplane, also claims to have the knowhow to construct a gadget that can frustrate election riggers in Nigeria. When he was younger, 17-year-old Ismaila Suraju was forced to make a pair of slippers out of a cardboard to shield his feet from the scorching soil of the farm path. The necessity of protecting his face from the sun also compelled him to produce a baseball cap, then cars, train, grinding machines, all with the same cardboard. NE gathered that half way through his secondary education, Suraju graduated into using aluminum sheets in making not only miniature automobiles, such as fire extinguishing vans, excavators, but a large size planting machine that can be used for planting, as well. “Anything I see, I will like to do. We went for competition. I saw...

FabLab Barcelona

CHECK OUT THIS PROJECT FROM FABLAB BARCELONA Previous Next IAAC  Campus  in  Valldaura Self-Sufficent Labs  hosted last week a working session for the ROMI EU project together with IAAC’s partner  Sony Computer Science Laboratory Paris  to set the starting point and the development plan of this  H2020 project . The main goal of the project , which will be carried on at  Valldaura Labs  under the direction of  Jonantan Minchin , is to develop an  open and lightweight robotics platform for micro-farms . After a week of work and sharing, the team analysed and collected data to plan the next steps of the project and the next meetings. Throughout the week,  Sony Computer Science Laboratory Paris  team in collaboration with the  IAAC  ,  Fab Lab BCN  Experts and the support of  Noumena  team, build and test the first  Rover ROMI . The Rover (land robot) acquires detailed inf...

Meet IBM's youngest Programmer

Tanmay Bakshi is a software developer who has published several apps and source code, as well as an author of a textbook on the programming language Swift. He has been invited to be a TEDx speaker. He has published "Tanmay Teaches" YouTube videos, and was the youngest IBM Watson Developer. He started coding at the age of 5 and built an iOS app at the age of 9. Bakshi has featured in articles by the Huffington Post India, NDTV, CBC News Toronto, QZ. Find more in the Programmers World in the Navigation Bar

Meet this Computer Prodigy

London:  Setting an unprecedented record, a seven-year-old British boy of Pakistani origin has become the world's youngest computer programmer. Muhammad Hamza Shahzad, resident of Handsworth area in Birmingham has been trained by his father Asim, who works with an American IT firm.   "I want to be Bill Gates," he told 'Birmingham Mail' this week. This is not the first time when Hamza has set a world record, he had become the world's youngest Microsoft Office Professional (MOP) last year at the age of six. In an exam, where candidates needed 700 points to get the coveted certificate, Hamza has scored 757, a Microsoft spokesperson said, adding he is now proficient in Software Development Fundamentals. "He can easily create Web App and manages to develop his own basic shopping cart app," he said. "He has got his hands dirty in Windows desktop App, console App, windows services, Web services and finds it really fun to develop simp...