Hi Steve,
Yes, we did experiment with gears in Etoys many years ago, and I think we tried
one or two experiments with gears at the Open School.
This is a case where lots of the goodness of the gears idea lies in the
physical world, and just giving kids a simulation of gears lacks "juice".
The gear models we did actually used collision detection to drive one gear by
another, and this was a good set of things for the kids to think about. This
would work better today (with more computing cycles available, etc.). One of
the important things we never got around to in Etoys was to make an industrial
strength collision detector (like the best ones used in video games) for both
the macro graphic objects and also for the particle system. Having one of these
as a basic facility would make a big difference in what could be thought about
and attempted.
Another fun thing at this level is to make "ratchets" and then "Feynman"
engines where particle energy exchanges from random collisions will nonetheless
drive the "engines" in the direction they can go.
Cheers,
Alan
>________________________________
> From: Steve Thomas <[email protected]>
>To: squeakland <[email protected]>; iaep <[email protected]>
>Sent: Friday, July 6, 2012 2:22 PM
>Subject: [IAEP] Has anyone build a set of gears in Etoys or any other freely
>available program?
>
>
>I got I asked my class to play LightBot and then asked them:
>"How this is like and not like "programming"
>
>This lead into one kids responding its like "mabey small motors and gears"
>(wish I knew what was going on in her mind, I'll ask in the next class)
>
>
>So I responded:
>I was on the Battleship NJ (commissioned in 1943). They had a "computer" on
>board to calculate the angle and direction of the big guns and could hit a
>target miles away within a few yards!!! Pretty impressive when you have to
>consider they had to take into account the ships speed and direction, wind
>speed, waves and the recoil from the guns firing. The whole "computer" was
>built using gears which controlled BIG motors to move the gun.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>Here's a pop quiz (you will be graded on this and it will go on your
>>PERMANENT record :)
>>What is the oldest computer we know about?
>>
>>I then asked them to think about and email me an answer to:
>What is a computer?
>I then added the caveat, non-biological computer, as a bunch came back with
>the answer "the brain".
>
>
>I found a nice video on a Lego version of the oldest know computer here.
>
>
>So I want to get them to try and build some adding machines (and I will see if
>we can find enough lego parts amonst us to do that as it would be best), but
>in case I can't, and just for fun.
>
>
>Has anyone build a set of gears in Etoys or any other freely available program?
>
>
>Thanks,
>Stephen
>_______________________________________________
>IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
>[email protected]
>http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep
>
>
_______________________________________________
IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
[email protected]
http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep