![]() ![]() If I lock it in a display cabinet, no one can take it out, scramble and out it back to play again. The MindCuber program is smart, but after it solves the cube, someone has to manually take it out, scramble and put it back again to solve. Therefore, I decided to put it in the display cabinet so everyone can see it always when they come to my building (S Block at Kelvin Grove Campus, QUT). (A 3D Rubik cube on the right for fun).īecause when someone borrows (for many days), quite often others will miss it. Is it cool? I am lucky to have access to LEGO NXT set at my school, so I build one (I named it Emma) in 2014, and since then, it was shown to many students, borrowed by colleagues and friends to show and inspire more and more children and adults. ![]() Thanks to David Gilday for this open source robot. And if you have a LEGO NXT or EV3 set, you can follow the wonderful instructions provided at to build your own robot Rubik Cube Solver. ![]() ![]() Have a look below in the video to see how it works and looks like. The mechanical design is elegant for a LEGO NXT 2.0 or 8527 set, and the programming (using NBC/NXC) is powerful and meeting the limited memory space in the NXT box. This robot is built using LEGO NXT or EV3. MindCuber, developed by David Gilday, is an early pioneer robot, which can solve a standard 3 x 3 x 3 Rubik cube. ![]()
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