Quote:
Originally Posted by RB73
What is the legality of using a computer on the robot as such in past years?
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I'm not sure about using a computer on the robot in the past years but obviously it was allowed in 2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by RB73
What restrictions have there been using a computer as such in past years?
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The major restrictions are that it can't drive anything. It isn't allowed to directly control motors or pneumatics or anything that moves. 3309 is writing a server program to run on cRIO so that all the cRIO does is drive the motors. We were getting fed up with how long it takes to build, deploy, and reboot the robot, so we're going to be using ROS in 2013.
Regarding power, I believe that batteries integrated into the system are allowed this year, so you don't have to remove a CMOS battery for example.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RB73
What is a good, cheap computer to use for this? Or what should I look for to do this?
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I believe this is the system that we used in 2012 (you'll have to run it through Google Translate because for some reason it ended up in German)
http://www.zotac.com/index.php?page=...100166&lang=en
You can use any computer really, I saw several teams with PandaBoards or BeagleBoards or BeagleBones. You might be able to use a Raspberry Pi even, but I don't know how well it could cope with intensive vision processing if you're planning anything like that. It should be able to handle analyzing single frames like a lot of teams did, but I doubt it could keep up with 30fps. Again, I've never used an RPi, so don't take my word for it.