Hi everyone, I'm back ... So.... I'm trying to build a robot with hover board brushless motor, and I will buy an old hoverboard to get its brushless motors, any idea about their size, working voltage, power consumption any idea about what the robot can do.. I'm all ears
Welcome aymen , working with hoverboards brushless motor is soo fun ! I had a good time working with,It use 36V battery packs. The motors themselves will likely be rated for 12V to 48V , i suggest starting with line following robot and for advanced project i suggest doing climbing robot , you will need to design suitable chassis for any project you will do , good luck
I have been pretty quiet on here last couple days. Got a writing job (my primary source of income) that had to be completed this morning: 6 articles that were each in the range of 1750 words dealing with cybersecurity topics in less than a week. Got the last one done around midnight last night!
Took my income this month from rather lackluster to my best month this year, though wow that was exhausting. Fun to challenge yourself once in a while though, reminded me of being in college, ha. So I guess the lesson is be ready for opportunities when they arise and jump on them? I couldn't have always done such a rush job, but glad it worked out that I could really dedicated myself to it in this case!
The interesting thing is that this company was "writing" this type of article using AI, but they weren't performing well. Wonder if I will see more of this type of work in the future. I get that AI is useful, but in an ideal world I'd prefer it kept to the querry/answer format of ChatGPT et al. That would likely give people a more direct answer without the confusion of "is this someone's actual opinion or an amalgamation of everyone's thoughts." Also, if AI articles are written based on other AI articles, then information could really go down some weird paths–and the Internet becomes even less authoritative as a data source?
Hello everyone please call me NOREEN I'm 23yo and I'm a psychologist that is a beginner in programming and IT also I'm working on a startup project about vr . Looking forward to learn from you all beautiful people! ^^
AI answers and articles will always be in " bot form" it can never compete with human touch, it can give accurate information but in a boring way that you can't read all the article without struggling
For the time being I would agree with you (and I can still see myself having a job), but give it a few more years of development and who really knows?
What's perhaps more broadly concerning though is that if AI-written articles are based on other AI-written articles... and so on and so forth, it really gets to a game of telephone where information just becomes nonsense. You could argue that aready happens somewhat given that people don't always (often?) go back to the original source, e.g. Wikipedia, but at least there are presumably knowledgable humans in the loop.
This is something I see a lot too with companies leveraging AI for content and thinking it's going to be able to put out a finished product. Even if you're really good with the prompts it still needs a lot of work.
And to your point (question), AI produces a lot of garbage data so if search engines don't recognize something as AI generated you end up with a homogenized mashup of content based on scraped data from content based on scraped data. Less and less authenticity.
Since you mention it... Does AI tools check if the informations are true or not or they just picked it from sites.. I saw this with COPILOT Ai it gives me literally copied phrases from site but what if it was a false info? Or some guy's opinion written in his article
Not sure, but IT would be doing the checking too! That being said, seems like I've seen discussion about humans stepping in at times, but then what is the point?
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I did this teardown of one a number of years ago: https://makezine.com/article/drones-vehicles/make-malfunctioning-hoverboard/ Looks like yours is a bit different, but maybe it will give you some insight into how to get it apart etc. Looking back, perhaps I should have actually ridden it around a bit, but the idea really terrified me at the time!
Make: DIY Projects and Ideas for MakersJeremy S Cook
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@ahmad ibrahim @Gr!mR3ap3r @Auross Welcome to the community! We're curious to hear about the twists and turns of your professional journey. Care to share?
Hi, @youcef_ali IMO it depends on the scope of the project incl. resources, cost, and scale of deployment. I prefer on-premise when it's limited devices to be deployed in a factory environment where data is not allowed to be hosted with any third company. I choose AWS IoT core when possible deployment of a good number of devices, scale, and a need for a public cloud in a project. Looking forward to hearing other's opinion
Hi everyone , I am looking for a (free) solution to move a servo connected to an ESP8266 with Google Home voice commands...! Like "OK Google, set the 'thing' to 50%" But I only find tutorials for controlling on/off type relays, mostly with IFTTT which is paid.
If you have any suggestions, please let me know.. Thanks in advance.
Okay fellow devs, on tomorrow's Office Hours Meetup we're looking for you to share your experience with distributors in your region.
Good, bad, or ugly, who are the fastest, cheapest, and most (and least) reliable options when sourcing electronic parts for prototyping projects? We're interested in you sharing your horror stories and pleasant surprises tomorrow at 15:00 GMT: https://discord.com/events/1130679493799977062/1235730737198665808@Event Pings
You can try using Blynk to connect your ESP8266 to Google Home. They offer free tiers and allow you to control servos based on voice commands through Google Assistant integration. https://blynk.io/getting-started