thank you guys for this and for setting up the pylabrobot simulator! could you guys do a round 2 demo (with yet uncovered applications and functions) at some point please, thank you!
Very interesting for me is that experienced scientists have this magic-like experience when they can control a robot in another room or building with these tools. This is something my non-technical dad does with lamps in his home for such a long time now that he doesn‘t even think about it. But still for the scientist it‘s a brand new idea. Maybe universities could employ some smart-home tech in their day-to-day workflows, so students will already have that expectation built in when they start doing real science? Eg. ordering a coffee from your iPhone while you still sit in the 8 am class, and then picking it up after the class.
This is super exciting work!!
thank you guys for this and for setting up the pylabrobot simulator! could you guys do a round 2 demo (with yet uncovered applications and functions) at some point please, thank you!
Sure!
Very interesting for me is that experienced scientists have this magic-like experience when they can control a robot in another room or building with these tools. This is something my non-technical dad does with lamps in his home for such a long time now that he doesn‘t even think about it. But still for the scientist it‘s a brand new idea. Maybe universities could employ some smart-home tech in their day-to-day workflows, so students will already have that expectation built in when they start doing real science? Eg. ordering a coffee from your iPhone while you still sit in the 8 am class, and then picking it up after the class.