Whatever you might call MindFest, about 300 people from diverse backgrounds attended. There were the MIT Media Lab people, LEGO employees, LEGO robot geeks like me, teachers, and kids. Both days of the event were filled with panel discussions, ranging from "Artistic Machines" and "Virtual Tinkering" to "Young Inventors" and "Robotics in the Classroom." Concurrent with the panel discussion were classroom-style tutorials and displays in the exhibit hall.

On Sunday morning, the esteemed Seymour Papert (author of Mindstorms, the book) followed up on Mitchel Resnick's thoughts by talking about the future of learning. It's clear to him that the current system is breaking down. Although this breakdown is generally known, nobody is thinking in concrete terms about what the educational system of the future will look like.
But it wasn't all deep thinking on a societal level. The weekend was highly enjoyable. Between the holographic lollipops and the great robots, there was a lot of fun to be had. And in a way, that was part of the larger picture too. One of the reasons LEGO robots are such a startling innovation is the creative power they place in the hands of children and adults. You have the ability to build and program anything you can imagine. You can learn a lot while you're having fun.
The people at the MIT Media Lab get to play with all sorts of cool stuff. Particularly relevant to LEGO robotics were Crickets, tiny programmable computers. Powered by a 9V battery, a Cricket is less than twice as large as its battery. It can control motors and respond to inputs, just like an RCX brick in a LEGO robot. Will Crickets become an official LEGO product, available to the public? We'll just have to wait and see.
Sega donated a tiny computer, the Visual Memory Unit (VMU), to every MindFest attendee. Looking like a miniaturized GameBoy, the VMU is host to pieces of information, dubbed iBalls by the Media Lab staff. They were tempted to call the VMU an iSocket, as it was a receptacle for iBalls, but they refrained. This left MindFest attendees calling them "iBall thingies" throughout the weekend.
The kicker about these tiny computers was that you could plug your VMU into someone else's VMU and exchange data. The Media Lab constructed a couple of interesting competitions based on this concept, and stations were set up where you could create other iBalls.
The highlight of the weekend was the "Extreme Mindstorms" panel discussion. This was a dream team of RCX hacking, including:

The
Pantheon of RCX hacking. From left to right, Michael Gasperi,
Markus Noga, Ralph Hempel, Dave Baum, and Kekoa Proudfoot.
Each of the panel participants gave a short presentation. Ralph Hempel talked about the lunar landing mission, thirty years ago. People sometimes complain about the limitations of the RCX, but it's a very capable machine. With the RCX, Ralph pointed out, you hold in your hand all the computing power that sent a man to the moon.
Along the same lines, Markus Noga noted that there's a certain form to be followed in any creative endeavor: the border of a painter's canvas, or the form of a sonnet. "Form is liberating," he declared. The structure of the RCX was just another form to be followed in creating legOS. "Creativity," he said, "unfolds into the given space."
Many attendees flew to MIT from abroad. LEGO employees came from Denmark and England. Other LEGO robot enthusiasts flew in from Italy, the Netherlands, and even Japan.

Mario Ferrari, Guilio Ferrari, and Marco Beri were showing off a robot that plays tic-tac-toe. Using a light sensor, the robot scanned the playing board to figure out where pieces had been played. Then it planned a move and physically placed a piece on the board.
Ralph Hempel demonstrated a robot that navigates a maze drawn on a piece of paper. He inverted the problem, so that instead of a robot moving through the maze, the maze moved through a robot that looked a lot like an optical scanner. In a tutorial session, he discussed depth-first and breadth-first maze solving algorithms. The demonstration was implemented entirely in pbFORTH.
Other interesting creations included the Pipe-Bot, a robot that scurries through PVC pipe, and the brick sorter, a robot that sorts LEGO bricks into piles based on their color. Robert Munafo demonstrated RilyBot 4, a robot that can be trained by moving it around. It remembers the movements and replays them later.
I put together the Minerva and Minerva Remote projects from my book. Curious onlookers had fun controlling Minerva using the remote control, picking up Smarties and moving them across a table.

Copyright © 2007 O'Reilly Media, Inc.