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This project focuses on developing a Bluetooth-controlled fire-fighting robot using Arduino. The robot's primary objective is to collect ping pong balls and deposit them into multi-angle tubes, ...
Working Initially we have to connect our Bluetooth module with our Smartphone via "Arduino Bluetooth" application. Then using the controller feature of the application we can press buttons to control ...
Based on a Nordic Semiconductor 32-bit ARM system-on-chip that has built-in support for Bluetooth 4.0, the RFduino runs the same code as Arduino UNO and DUE boards, and it works with any type of ...
Remote control robots are nothing new. Using Bluetooth isn’t all that unusual, either. What [SayantanM4] did was make a Bluetooth robot that accepts voice commands via his phone. The robot it… ...
ArcBotics' stretch goals for Sparki of $100,000, $200,000, and $300,000 would allow it to build an Android app to control Sparki via Bluetooth, a wireless data radio for communicating with other ...
A machine is required when humans would like to work in different environmental conditions, such as toxic material, remote handling of bombs, health conditions, and sewage treatment. The paper aims to ...
The Bluetooth control is done by using Nordic toolbox to send commands to an MDBT40 Bluetooth module that was reprogrammed with an ST-Link V2. The module forwards the command to the Arduino.
Controlled by an Arduino Uno, the robot uses a Slamtec RPLIDAR sensor to help map out its surroundings. The microcontroller is also armed with a Bluetooth link and an SD card for storage.
This paper proposes a voice-controlled robotic system that uses Bluetooth to follow human commands. The voice commands are given to an android app built using MIT App Inventor. These commands are then ...
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