Joe Nagata's Lego Mindstorms Idea Book
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Average customer review:Product Description
LEGO MINDSTORMS is an incredibly popular robot-building kit from LEGO. This book is for you if you just want to build some fun robots and see what they do. Joe Nagata’s LEGO MINDSTORMS Idea Book shows how to build ten fun robots, with step-by-step instructions and lots of clear diagrams, including a rolling car, centipede, water strider, LEGOsaurus, train, walker, climber, LEGO clock, pneumatic engine car, and a beetle. While building these robots, you’re sure to come up with ideas for building many more robots.
The book includes complete parts lists for building the robots, a discussion of robotic mechanisms, and detailed directions for building each of the ten robots with illustrations for each step. A final section offers ideas and hints for building and having fun with LEGO MINDSTORMS robots.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #846933 in Books
- Published on: 2001-04
- Format: Illustrated
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 200 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Lots of engineers--and more than a few others--cherish their memories of childhood Lego kits. Indeed, one-time finger-on-the-pulse author Douglas Coupland used Lego blocks as a metaphor for the community of under-30 software workers in his book, Microserfs. With the release of LEGO MindStorms, the nubbly toys come of age with motors, sensors, and--most importantly--the ability to follow procedural rules described in software programs. Joe Nagata's LEGO MindStorms Idea Book is a fantastic companion to the mechanized pieces: well worth the cover price for anyone who's played around with MindStorms and is looking for project ideas.
Nagata covers both sides of the MindStorms equation--mechanical construction and logical control--very well. Every step in the physical assembly procedure for each robot is clearly illustrated with orthographic drawings similar to those in Lego kit documentation. Color would make these drawings even better (they're printed in contrasting gray tones, with color pictures of each finished project in a center section) but would probably add a lot to the price. The coverage of software is good too, consisting variously (depending on the complexity of the program) of a screen shot of the MindStorms visual programming environment or a listing of Not Quite C (NQC) code. This book achieves what should be the main goal of any book about Lego blocks: it gets the reader thinking about ways to modify and expand on the ideas in it. --David Wall
Topics covered: How to construct and program a variety of creatures, vehicles, and machines with LEGO MindStorms pieces. Projects include (this list is comprehensive) a car, a centipede, a vehicle that skates, a dinosaur, a train that runs on tracks, a walker with articulated legs, a segmented vehicle that will climb over obstacles, an analog clock, a six-legged bug that can be made to turn right and left, and a very (very) cool car, in which the motor is used not for direct propulsion, but to compress air that propels the vehicle forward.
From the Publisher
Building robots is something that kids and adults can enjoy together. This book is an easy, step-by-step guide to building custom robots. With lots of pictures and simple instructions, it is a useful and exciting way to have more fun with the LEGO MINDSTORMS Robotics kit. And, with its Japanese origins, it brings a certain inventiveness and element of fun found only in Japan.
About the Author
Joe Nagata is a computer graphic artist living in Japan.
Customer Reviews
Interesting ideas but lousy execution
Perhaps I'm spoiled by Dave Baum's great books but I found this book very frustrating. Some of the bots are interesting but I was unable to build most of them because they require extra parts that don't come in the Lego Mindstorms RIS. That'd be OK if the book told you what extra part syou need but I'd get 70% done and find myself short 6 #3 elbows (or whatever). True, he lists the needed parts before each bot, but he doesn't tell you which ones aren't part of the RIS. Baum does. Also, the pictures in the book lack contrast so it is hard to see details and the "steps" aren't specific. Buy the Baum books instead.
Not Quite 5 stars
This book is a very good resource for learning the mechanical aspects of Mindstorms robots. The book provides step-by-step detail for several robot creations, with a range of complexities.
PROS: Detailed building plans and programs. Building tips to help you understand the principals behind the design. Joe Nagata: just go to his web site to see his LEGO creations and you'll know you're in good hands. Some really inventive creations, like the "water skater," a wheeled 'bot that propels itself using the same motion that a skater would use.
CONS: You'll need more parts than come with the standard Mindstorms kit. The book doesn't seem to be laid out correctly -the instructions for the current frame are adjacent to the next frame. Once you figure it out, it's not a problem. Some of the models didn't work very well as built - this is actually a PRO if you like to learn by troubleshooting.
Not Quite 5 stars
This book is a very good resource for learning the mechanical aspects of Mindstorms robots. The book provides step-by-step detail for several robot creations, with a range of complexities.
PROS: Detailed building plans and programs. Building tips to help you understand the principals behind the design. Joe Nagata: just go to his web site to see his LEGO creations and you'll know you're in good hands. Some really inventive creations, like the "water skater," a wheeled 'bot that propels itself using the same motion that a skater would use.
CONS: You'll need more parts than come with the standard Mindstorms kit. The book doesn't seem to be laid out correctly -the instructions for the current frame are adjacent to the next frame. Once you figure it out, it's not a problem. Some of the models didn't work very well as built - this is actually a PRO if you like to learn by troubleshooting.




