Team:Alberta/Project/Automation
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+ | <h2>In the event that you want to build it yourself...</h2> | ||
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+ | <h4>Are you crazy?</h4> | ||
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+ | <h4>More seriously:</h4> | ||
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+ | Source code is a work in progress and as such has not been posted here. However, the latest, most up to date version is available upon request. The physical setup is also somewhat a work in progress. Also, creating the LCad drawings would have taken forever. Should you desire building instructions, high resolution photographs can be taken from multiple angles and sent instead. | ||
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Revision as of 21:01, 18 October 2009
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DIY AutomationOne of the main themes of this project, as well as iGEM in general, is that simplification of both parts and processes provided by the synthetic biology movement are capable of bringing relatively advanced biological techniques 'to the masses'. With one of the DNA assembly techinques that have been developed during the course of the summer, the goal was to speed up and simplify a very time consuming process. The hope is that it would be simple enough to be used by high school students. Better yet, a trained monkey. Even better still, a simple robotic device, thereby leaving the both the original lab technician, the high school student, and the trained monkey more time for beer, which leads to the situation where a lab techician, high school student and monkey all walk into the bar (cliche, I know). |
The Robotic DeviceSo about this robotic device. Since the DNA assembly method consists mainly of a few repeated and simple actions, interspersed with relatively long wait periods, it seemed like a good canidate for a little bit of automation. This little automaton is built entirely out of a popular plastic construction set, using the only the standard pieces and hardware.
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Hardware and Software
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Getting to a Working Prototype
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Future Work
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In the event that you want to build it yourself...
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