Build Your Own Electric Etch-A-Sketch 104
mhaisley writes "Ok, case mods are cool, monitor mods are nifty... but an Electric Etch-a-Sketch beats either. Students at Cornell University built an electronically controlled etch-a-sketch, controllable by a PC mouse. This was part of a group of class final projects featured by their instructor."
Re:COOOOL (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:COOOOL (Score:3, Informative)
This is something students have probably done for such projects for 15 years.
Reminds me of those EtchASketch tech support calls (Score:5, Funny)
Support: Shake it.
Re:Reminds me of those EtchASketch tech support ca (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Reminds me of those EtchASketch tech support ca (Score:1)
Re:Reminds me of those EtchASketch tech support ca (Score:1)
Re:Reminds me of those EtchASketch tech support ca (Score:1)
Support: Shake it.
* pause * rattle *
User: That didnt fix it. I think I spoiled my Etch A Sketch for good!
Support: May I have your name sir?
User: Al Gore
Support: Have a nice day! Bye!
* click *
Re:Ethical? (Score:1)
Re:Ethical? (Score:2)
Has been done before (Score:5, Funny)
Not even Photoshop (Score:1)
Re:Has been done before (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Has been done before (Score:2)
Re:Has been done before (Score:2)
Yeah, 'cause that's actually a lot closerr to an Etch-A-Sketch, at least in terms of functionality. ;-)
Re:Has been done before (Score:1)
Photoshop is too complicated to count.
"Paint" is probably more like an etch-a-sketch.
--
Kirby Reviews [generalhouseware.com]
wow... (Score:5, Funny)
i always saw kids in the commercials w/ these elaborate trucks drawn, i couldn't even make a damn circle
not that im bitter...
Re:wow... (Score:4, Funny)
It's quite easy. You simply rotate the knobs either clockwise or counter-clockwise depending on whether the sine wave sample is above the x axis or below it and at a speed indicated by the value of the y axis. Obviously, the x axis represents time.
The only tricky part is remembering that the left and right knobs aren't ever at the same point in the sine wave so you have to remember that your left hand and right hand might be moving in different directions and at different speeds. At first I founnd that it helped to use a precalculated lookup table but now I can just do the trig calculations on the fly.
Hope that helps!
Re:wow... (Score:1)
Fractals are where its at... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Fractals are where its at... (Score:1)
Re:Cool? (Score:1)
Re:Cool? (Score:1)
Wouldn't it be cool (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Wouldn't it be cool (Score:2, Interesting)
The cheapest item on the BOM would be ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The cheapest item on the BOM would be ... (Score:2)
Technology for the sake of art huh? What like a printer?
I think you mean 'technologia gratia technologiae' technology for technology's sake.
Off topic! Ha, I wrote this on an etch-a-sketch!
Forget the etch a sketch. STM project (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Forget the etch a sketch. STM project (Score:3, Interesting)
Then again, the EAS project is pretty simple either, just a pair of stepper motors. Cool, but what michael (why the fuck is that moron still allowed to post anything? seriously) described sounds more like an electron beam magnetizing the screen selectively.
Old mouse designs/upsidedown etch-asketch (Score:2)
Now its has come full circle and you can use a ball mouse to the 2 paddles..
Re:Old mouse/COMP designs - Full Circle (Score:1)
I thought the idea was great, if they could work a large wooden beaver into the design.
No really, if they could build some mouse-jigs they could use the modified Electr-O-Sketch to design loom components. Soon they'd innovate Punchcards [slashdot.org], then the Difference Engine [ideafinder.com] - and finally the mouse [netclique.net].
With recent advances in transistors and microprocessors they'd soon be able to design childrens toys without the need of the highly inefficient clay tablet [netcom.com]
I predict a bright future for this group of stalwart free thi
Re:It's just a plotter... (Score:2)
Sorry, it just reminded me of the English rhyme about Guy Fawkes [guy-fawkes.com] attempting to blow up parliament:
Remember, remember the Fifth of November
Gunpowder, treason and plot.
If only... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:If only... (Score:1)
GIF2EAS (Score:2, Interesting)
What the needed to do was
supply a image as input
and have the thing
A) Translate it to b&w
B) Have the EAS automatically draw it
Kind of like the novelty of
translating an image to
ascii
Cheers,
--The Dude
The original plotter (Score:1)
Re:The original plotter (Score:4, Informative)
There was the Iconarama, which was an Etch-A-Sketch like device attached to a projector. This was the first large-screen computer controlled display, and was used by NORAD in the 1950s. The device scratched transparent areas onto a slide, projecting icons (usually aircraft tracks) on a screen. When the screen became too cluttered, a slide changer loaded a new blank slide. Two complete systems aimed at the same screen were used, to avoid a blank period during slide change and redraw and to provide redundancy.
The Iconarama was one of a long series of early military attempts to build large-screen displays. There were wall-sized plotters. CRT/film/photo processor/projector combinations. The Eidophor oil-film projector. [earlytelevision.org]
Eidophor technology first appeared in 1943, and there are still a few units in use. No other technology until DLP could reach the 4000 lumen light level of an Eidophor unit.
Re:The original plotter (Score:1)
Re:Sorry, but this has been done before... (Score:2)
And good for them. You are saying that everything done by one generation is -- done -- and nobody in the future should try it also? Besides, reinventing the (insert interesting invention here) is very educational.
Re:Sorry, but this has been done before... (Score:2)
Reinventing is merely another form of rote. That isn't learning, that is merely the act of repetition.
Re:Sorry, but this has been done before... (Score:2)
Only the physical result is the repetition. The work in reinventing is entirely original within the mind(s) of those undertaking it. It is not even vaguely related to rote-learning.
Re:Sorry, but this has been done before... (Score:1)
It was funny to read about how they discovered the "Phenomon" that if you continually turn an Etch-A-Sketch knob in one direction, it never actually stops. Something every kid figures out right away. They used this "Feature" for reseting the stylus in the center of the screen.
Re:Sorry, but this has been done before... (Score:2)
Re:Sorry, but this has been done before... (Score:1)
Now this is... (Score:2)
I once thought about building a plotter with a mate of mine, maybe I'll bring the idea back up again...
Re:Now this is... (Score:1)
You sure your mate doesn't mind being used as a hardware component?
;-)
It's missing a way to erase it... (Score:4, Informative)
I used a big servo (made for a remote controlled boat) to flip it over. Also a solenoid to lock the screen in the vertical position so that the servo/solenoid only need to be energized while the screen is being shaken.
A system admin's dream item... (Score:2)
I'd want to buy one for every Pointy-Haired Boss I've had to help with their computer...
Direct X support? (Score:3, Funny)
the art of motion control (Score:3, Informative)
I think the most interesting thing here is the wide range of projects of their class page [cornell.edu] and how they have come up with inventive ways of using microcontrollers (sure some of them aren't new but that doesn't mean they aren't cool work for a class of students).
But if you think this is cool then you should check out the work of Bruce Shapiro [taomc.com]. He's got a stepper motor controlled Etch a Sketch, but that's only the begining. How about a home built two axis plasma cutter [taomc.com], or a an old dental mill [taomc.com] that turns 2d pictures into 3d sculptures.
Re:Before their time (Score:2)
Done at U. of Delaware also (Score:3, Informative)
Cornell has turned itself into a Microsoft shop, so it's appropriate that they're all excited about something that others did years before.
And yet... (Score:3, Interesting)
Not Quite Original (Score:1)
A bit underwhelming.... (Score:3, Informative)
Why was a microcontroller even NEEDED here? Rewiring the mouse to provide the raw X and Y encoder wheel pulses, and applying them right to the stepper drivers would give substantially the same results without the MCU and all the programming. If the stepper drivers need step and direction signals rather than quadrature pulse trains, run the encoder signals through one of the LSI/CSI encoder interface chips to get whatever you want without writing code or burning it onto a chip. A programmable solution for something this simple seems like complexity for complexity's sake...
Re:A bit underwhelming.... (Score:1)
Re:A bit underwhelming.... (Score:2)
Overall, not particularly... (Score:1)
FWIW, I went to a Vo-Tech HS, and studied electronics technology. Myself and another student made a project out of a child's toy robotic arm (IIRC it was called an "armitron") that we rigged up with a half-dozen DC motors and controlled via the parallel port on a ZX81. Programmed in BASIC to execute simple moves. This would have been during the junior year of HS.
Re:A bit underwhelming.... (Score:1)
Niftyness^2 (Score:1)
A friend of mine also built one (Score:1)
check this out (Score:1, Informative)
http://instruct1.cit.cornell.edu/courses/ee476/Fin alProjects/s2004/aeh28/Website/index.htm [cornell.edu]
Check out the rest of the projects students in this class have made: http://instruct1.cit.cornell.edu/courses/ee476/Fin alProjects/ [cornell.edu]
Keep in mind that students in ece476 only have about a month to do their final project and that is on top of all their other classes' final projects.
Had one over 30 years ago. (Score:2)
It was called an X-Y plotter [hp.com].
I've done this too. (Score:1)
Geez, I should have patented it. (Score:2)
-russ
Re:Final Year Project?!? (Score:1)
Re:Final Year Project?!? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Final Year Project?!? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Department of Redundancy Department (Score:2, Interesting)
Inside the mouse is a ball driving two optical encoders: one for X, one for Y, mechanically placed 90 degrees apart.
The optical disks and detector are made in such a manner as to produce a quadrature encoded output.
With very minimal "glue logic", these signals could be changed to the quadrature encoded drive signals required by a stepper motor.
This would have eliminated the whole processor.
But, they used a roundabout w
Re:Department of Redundancy Department (Score:1)
I guess there are several perspectives for viewing this project.
When I saw it, I did not see it much as a production plan for making the device, as much as I saw it as a platform they had constructed to demonstrate their ability to serially communicate to a mouse, process the info with a microcontroller, then drive motors based on the result. An exercise in interfacing.
I also consider that AVR processors are quite cheap, damn near cheap as a couple of glue logic chips. The