Well, I finally finished the conrtol board for my robot, I
am getting ready to plug it all in and test it. I have some
pictures on my blog (briansrobotics.blogspot.com) if
you want to check it out...
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Well, I finally finished the conrtol board for my robot, I
am getting ready to plug it all in and test it. I have some
pictures on my blog (briansrobotics.blogspot.com) if
you want to check it out...
I am sure all of you are wondering why I have not posted in a while. Well, I have been playing around with Operating System Development. It is very fun stuff!
Right now I am doing a pure Assembly OS. I have my OS based off of the EasyOS structure. I have been able to accomplish some basic command line instructions. Right now I am developing a simple GUI structure to operate on…
I have made soe progress on my robot's control system, I have a picture and more details on my blog briansrobotics.blogspot.com...
If any of you were wondering why I wasn't updating, it was because I was on vacation. But now I am back, so on with the updates.
Recently I have decided do go deeper with my voice recognition journey. Instead of using the Microsoft speech SDK, I am going to be developing my own Speech Recognition engine. My reason for doing this is although the MS Speech SDK is nice, it doesn't provide the accuracy that I am looking for.
I know, this seems as if it would be impossible, but I have worked it down to a science. The way I will attempt to do this is I will have my Microphone input stream inputting to an array of numbers, then I will compare that array to another array for specific commands.
If you are asking how this will be more accurate, then I shall explain. The original arrays that I will be comparing against is the specific words, spoken by me, so the input and the comparing arrays for specific words will be extremely close already, also I won't have millions of other words that the engine is trying to match the input against. Only the ones that I setup.
Right now I am leaning towards using the DirectX Voice input libraries as my voice command input stream. By if I can find something more efficient, then I go for that.
I just finished making a Voice Command Tutorial, More information on my blog: briansrobotics.blogspot.com
Well, as of right now I am doing some more waiting for parts. I found out that I needed a different solution for mounting and connecting up my StampStack 2 module. My Options now are getting an IC socket for the PIC16c57A inside the StampStack and also getting a 20Mhz Resonator to go with it, or I could get a PC Board that would fit the StampStack. I want to go with the socket/resonator approach because that would cost less on the long run and my processor unit's for my robots would be smaller...
cout << "Celebrate\n" <<endl;
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I also have been making a program that reads and writes stuff to the serial port. That has proved to be more difficult than the Voice Recognition (surprisingly enough).
Once I get the Serial Communication working I will integrate that into my voice program and then use voice commands to send commands to my Basic Stamp 2. Pretty cool huh? Once that is all fine and dandy I am thinking of getting a RF transmitter and a RF receiver and setting all the communication stuff for the Serial cable through those…
Well folks... Friday I broke and stopped the H-Bridge construction. I realized that the things I had to drive the motors were inadequate, and thought it thought and realized the cost of new parts for the H-Bridge (to build it myself) would be more expensive than just buying an H-bridge driver...
So I am getting some low power H-bridge driver IC's from Digi-Key, they are the DRIVER-SN754410 from Texas Instruments... Nice driver with dual motor capacity, 1AMP current peak (works for me, I only need 320 milliamps for the motors I am driving), 4.5v to 36v... So this IC should cover my motor driving needs for this project and many-a-more to come....
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