Thought I'd share this with you guys.


It originated in the UK out of Reading University (where the slightly nutty
Professor Kevin Warwick teaches cybernetics) but is now also available in Australia, The Netherlands, Singapore, Germany, France, South Africa and recently Japan.
It's a weekly magazine all about science and robotics that comes with the hardware and software to build your own rover-style robot. Nothing fancy like MER or Asimo, just a three wheeled bug-like machine but it's a great educational toy for kids and adults alike.
In Japan we are now up to issue 14 so our little robot is now capable of automatically following a light source or following a line on the floor. The UK is already on issue 46 or so. As the weeks progress it will get more parts, in the next couple of weeks we'll be adding sonar sensors that will give it collision avoidance or follow-the-leader capability. Later we'll be building a hand controller (bit like a game-boy Advance), remotely control it by infra red, to program it using a PC link and software, then building a microphone headset and voice recognition circuitry to command it by voice.
My daughter is only 4 now but by the time it is completed she'll be 6 going on 7. Thanks to this project, she already has a very basic understanding of what a sensor, a circuit board, and infra red light is.
Well worth the money every week as a toy for me and education for her. If it ever shows up in the USA, I thoroughly recommend it, even if you don't have kids. I know you can probably buy a ready made robot toy nowadays (such as Lego Mindstorms) that will do much the same but my daughter really loves that she can help Daddy put it together each week and see it do "new tricks". It also has an interesting side effect that she has already learned to patiently wait for the next issue to arrive.
BTW, my daughter has named it "koko" which means "here!" in Japanese. (it can be set to follow a walking person using its sonar sensors.)
(and to think, when I was a kid, all we had were clockwork trains!!!)
Real Robots UKA Cybot Builder's home page------------------------
Even though I wish the opposite were true, I really believe that manned spaceflight is not going to escape out of LEO in the next 20~30 years. With the increase in robotic capability and telepresence, and the significantly lower costs of mounting a robotic mission I firmly believe that the near to medium future of space exploration lies in robots. I know my daughter is only 4 now but I just hope in some way I can spark her interest, I am convinced it is going to be a top career in the near future.