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jamestimmins 5 hours ago

Haven’t done robotics, but this approach is also much more feasible now with AI, which I appreciate.

relaxing 3 hours ago | parent [-]

OP wants to brush up on their skills, not have AI do it for them.

8note 13 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

the barrier to entry for a lot of playing around is getting a working scaffold to be able to run all your testing from

id expect it could pick you out a breadboard, a micro, some actuators and sensors, along with get a code deploy and run harness going for you, so you can focus on doing the robotics, rather than anything else.

serf 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

>OP wants to brush up on their skills, not have AI do it for them.

the two things aren't mutually exclusive.

if an AI tells you "solder A to B" you're going to learn some technique whether you want to or not. Extrapolated entirely into a robotics project.. there's a lot to gain just through sheer osmosis of instruction.

bitwize an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I don't think using ChatGPT as a wikihow is going to blunt their skills. As long as what the LLM says is actually correct.

ImPostingOnHN an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

Some people learn by doing, or learn by example, and the faster they can get into doing an example, the faster they will learn.

I am one of those people, and I can't count how many textbooks I own, of which I've read the first few chapters, and lost interest because I wasn't doing anything, only reading.

When I can instead start doing something, as GP emphasized, I can learn the applicable concepts as they're applied, which works well for me. AI helps me do that, because it is like a textbook that follows along with me, rather than asking me to follow it. Also I ask a lot of questions.