The most enthusiastic programmers I've ever met (6502 Darc Side)
Ғылым және технология
This past spring I attended the FRC North Carolina State Championships and got to talk to a bunch of the teams. If you've never heard of FIRST Robotics, you're in for a real treat, because this competition is AWESOME. (If you haven't seen the hub video for all these interviews, check it out first! • The annual engineering... )
These teams, thousands of them, have only about 2 months to design, build, and test robots to play a brand new game before the competitions begin, and then their work is put to the test! It would be a lot for any professional engineer, but these kids are still in high school! It's pretty incredible.
This video is the complete pit interview with FIRST Team 6502. Enjoy!
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To join or support team 6502:
6502.team/
www.da.org/thedaexperience/up...
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If you're interested in finding a team or attending an event, here's the official team search from FIRST:
www.firstinspires.org/team-ev...
And if you want to know more about any specific team (like a link to their website) you can probably find it on Blue Alliance:
www.thebluealliance.com/
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This is a world map that shows events and teams. I'm not sure how accurate it is because it doesn't look official, but it's a lot easier to search by eye! (and it also doesn't include the other FIRST programs like FLL and FTC (FRC was featured in the video))
frcmap.com/
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If you're looking to help a team as a mentor, volunteer, or sponsor:
www.firstinspires.org/support
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Music in this video:
I Dunno by grapes is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
ccmixter.org/files/grapes/16626
Пікірлер: 65
To join or support team 6502: 6502.team/ www.da.org/thedaexperience/upper-school/competitive-academic-teams/robotics ------------------------------------------------------ If you're interested in finding a team or attending an event, here's the official team search from FIRST: www.firstinspires.org/team-event-search And if you want to know more about any specific team (like a link to their website) you can probably find it on Blue Alliance: www.thebluealliance.com/ ------------------------------------------------------ This is a world map that shows events and teams. I'm not sure how accurate it is because it doesn't look official, but it's a lot easier to search by eye! (and it also doesn't include the other FIRST programs like FLL and FTC (FRC was featured in the video)) frcmap.com/ ------------------------------------------------------ If you're looking to help a team as a mentor, volunteer, or sponsor: www.firstinspires.org/support
man it's awesome to see these students enthusiasm and engineering
Wow! This programmer is so enthusiastic! It’s so nice to hear that he was able learn so much in two years of robotics. I was in FRC too and I programmed for all 4 years, and I didn’t learn how to do even a quarter of how to do this stuff! He must have an amazing coach or an insane work ethic. Thank you for making these videos, it has been so enjoyable being able to visit the pits again.
@tatestaples3127
Жыл бұрын
Thanks. I was mostly self taught but the discord is a really great community that helped me a lot. Also my high school let me spend a semester doing an independent study on making an autonomous FRC robot
@naveenchavali8488
Жыл бұрын
@@tatestaples3127 Totally resonating with what Phillip wrote above. What you have achieved and created is extremely impressive.
@MikkoRantalainen
Жыл бұрын
@@tatestaples3127 Great work getting the code to run in simulator before the actual hardware, too. Way too many beginner builders run the code with actual hardware from start and end up breaking servos and other parts because of software bugs.
Seeing young ppl still have that twinkle in their eye for sci/eng is the best!
6502 computers FTW! wait, these aren't Commodore 64s...
I just moved down to NC for my first proper job out of college, I’ll definitely keep an eye out for this competition next year!
Little known fact; Benders CPU is a 6502. Now you know...
i wish i could make robots like this but sadly its waaaay too expinsive, but i can still learn about other people approaches like this
@fourthpanda
Жыл бұрын
To make one of these robots is about $3000 in parts, not including cost to manufacture like CNC or laser cutting parts. (Although most teams in FRC don't have the manufacturing capabilities that those in these videos and at the competition do. You just don't see the lower half of the population of teams because they never get coverage because they are not at as many prestigious events.) Alot of that cost comes from the almost proprietary electronics though. If you were to use different motor controllers and onboard computer you could probably cut the cost significantly.
@FiltyIncognito
Жыл бұрын
There are ways around the retail expense, for the most part. People throw away a lot of still very usable components. Collect junk, take it apart and store the electrical/mechanical components and materials. Eventually you end up with a big enough bank of stuff that you can start putting together some fun and useful gadgets. There are, of course, some things that'll be harder to find than others.
@-BarathKumarS
Жыл бұрын
@@fourthpanda Jeezthat's definitely expensive wth.
@fourthpanda
Жыл бұрын
@@-BarathKumarS also keep in mind that that's to start from scratch. Alot of teams reuse parts from previous years. Although the richy rich teams can afford to keep their previous robots intact which I'm so jealous of.
@vaughnkhouri1364
Жыл бұрын
@@fourthpanda 3000 is conservative. On our team, we have about 15k for parts budget every year. But the thing is that also includes prototyping costs which can be excruciatingly high
Wow. Highly motivated, very enthusiastic and quite dedicated and most importantly, very happy. I sincerely hope that they maintain all of these for a very, very long time. Have fun,Young Ones.
waow, i still cant put my head around the logical thinking they have to go through, love to see it in real life and spent time with them to absorb engineering skills like these for myself as an future aerospace engineer.
I'm loving these videos.
FRC is THE reason I am perusing a career in Mechanical Engineering. So excited you're giving these competitions a platform like this. Best experience ever! Go 3328 NOHOROBO!!!!!
Future engineers right there.
These kids are wild. I was just excited to get the motor for my erector set functioning!
@fourthpanda
Жыл бұрын
What goes down is very impressive. I would say this team in particular because they are a relatively newer team and don't have nearly as much grandfathered in equipment and knowledge. (That's a huge part of what makes alot of teams good.)
The 6502 died long before any of the parents of any of these kids ever met. My first desktop was an original Apple ][ 16K. I spent tons of money upgrading that craprod. Learned how to do assembly, BASIC, and Pascal all on that box. Motorola paid me to create test equipment based on Apple ][s, if you can believe that. Never made any money at all with my knowledge of Pascal, but the assembly and BASIC made me plenty later on. Heh.
They deserve such a cool team number.
This poor girl thinks porsches are better engineered than Hondas. LMAO! Great stuff! Keep up the coverage.
@wwjccsd
Жыл бұрын
Shoulda kept the Honda parts,will last 20 years, and you can replace them when the Porsche parts break down.
@tatestaples3127
Жыл бұрын
But can your motors play music?
@Wise4HarvestTime
7 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
The Moon program will need various robots, some with 50 meter reels to drop in craters to look for ice.
lovely kids.
1:09 Reminds me of Jordan Cochran from Real Genius
A Perfect Circle
That's nothing. Their day job is bypassing Google security to watch KZread in class 🤣
These kids are cool
I have a modern maths ebook for tech people in these fields as shown in the this video.
In similar competitions I realised, that it's way better to not be that overengineered cuz more can break, even if the things work they don't work as great as if you have a compact solution and its way harder to add a feature if you got a great idea
@architakumar2579
Жыл бұрын
Yeah even i noticed that on a lot of these robots. Too many points of failure. The design is nice but that's my 2 cents on it.
@ATOM-vv3xu
Жыл бұрын
@@architakumar2579 first of all great name (my fav song is called like that) and yes, the others are overengineered too but this time alpha phoenix congratulated them for it and I just think that's kinda wrong to support unbeneficial behaviour
@NewtoRah
Жыл бұрын
There's a lot you can say about Elon Musk, but his "The best part is no part" strategy with SpaceX is solid. If you can do the job without complexity, get rid of the complexity
@Appletank8
Жыл бұрын
On the other hand, if you can perfect every component, you end up with a superior product. This team ended up being able to shoot for points while being rammed. As long as the bot can last 10 min without issue, that's fine.
@Appletank8
Жыл бұрын
@@NewtoRah Unless the job requires that complexity. The Raptor engine is a full flow combustion type, basically the most complex configuration you can get in order to reach the highest possible efficiency.
Does your mind snap from programming so that you eventually become enthusiastic? I feel like only Lua could cause this.
@Spero_Hawk
Жыл бұрын
Programming anything with real world interaction is always much more fun!
I was the best on my high school robotics team at the time (or at least the best at programming) and I couldn't do a quarter of what they do here.
OMGosh Fun!
I've seen a programmer more enthusiastic than this only once before, he was wearing cat ears and striped stockings.
nerds rule
Programmers are always the most depressed ones
@Wise4HarvestTime
7 ай бұрын
Not when programming robots!!!