Legos are fun, but rifling through big, unsorted bags of these plastic bricks to find just the right ones isn't. Third graders at Runnels School in Baton Rouge think they have an answer: a Lego shaker ...
Serious brick heads know there are a few big enemies of building with LEGO. There’s the “where in the freak is that one missing piece?” problem. And, of course, the test of a thousand thumbnails. But ...
Anyone who grew up with Lego will remember buying and building individual sets, only to see their collection morph into an unruly, unsorted mass over time. Sorting through a vast array of bricks to ...
On YouTube, you can learn how one man created a Lego sorting machine using AI, motors, and of course, Lego bricks. Share on Facebook (opens in a new window) Share on X (opens in a new window) Share on ...
This isn’t actually the first time that scientists have used Lego blocks for science. Back in 2014, researchers at Iowa University employed the Danish toys for science research. According to the ...
Sort A Brick uses computer vision and AI to automatically assemble sets from used building blocks. Missing parts are added. The system can recognize more than 25,000 different building blocks in 4,000 ...
Serious brick heads know there are a few big enemies of building with LEGO. There’s the “where in the freak is that one missing piece?” problem. And, of course, the test of a thousand thumbnails. But ...