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Code Warriors is a new 3D coding game designed with special analytics-tracking for students and teachers to learn coding in and outside of the classroom.
A Lexington parent and his robot plan to change the way children learn to code. Zivthan Dubrovsky, who runs the robotics lab at Harvard’s Wyss Institute, and his team have spent the better part ...
The robot itself can navigate obstacles, detect lines and report back by using infrared, grey scale, and sound speakers. DFRobot is running a Kickstarter campaign to bring the Vortex to manufacturing.
That’s because they’ve created a 3D-printed robot called Root, designed to teach kids how to code.
The cute self-balancing triangular robot can be programmed with an iPad app, but is it enough to entice tykes to code?
Toy robots that teach kids how to code are, honestly, nothing new. But, on the CES 2018 show floor, we’ve met one coding toy robot to beat them all: the Root by Root Robotics and Coding & Play.
Kubo Robot wants to teach your kids to code. And to get started on that goal, the Danish company is launching a crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo.
If you want to get kids' full undivided attention, you'll have to think of a fun way to do things. That's why a group of roboticists from Harvard's Wyss Institute created Root: a small hexagonal ...
The robot would be a lot more accessible to a lot more kids if it supported a child-friendly language. Out of the box, the unit comes with the code to draw a few simple shapes and a maze.