Actually, the price policies are very real. I can't get into the details of it but I can assure you that if a company can save 1 million by saving 10 cents on a part, they will do it. If the result reduces the ability for a small percentage of its customers to not be able to do something, then so be it. Most kids can barely program 4 sensors, let alone 127 of them.
Always keep this in mind when you are faced with limitations of the NXT platform: "You are not the target audience." LEGO loves its AFOLs and fosters this community but when the NXT was designed, the AFOLs were not what drove the design process. AFOLs do amazing things with the NXT and the people at LEGO are very glad they do, but, again, we were never intended as the main selling market. Things turned out a bit differently, of course, with an estimated 50% of all NXTs owned by adults.
20/20 hindsight and all that.
- Xander
several commercial i2c sensors to connect at 1 NXT port?
Re: several commercial i2c sensors to connect at 1 NXT port?
| My Blog: I'd Rather Be Building Robots (http://botbench.com)
| RobotC 3rd Party Driver Suite: (http://rdpartyrobotcdr.sourceforge.net)
| Some people, when confronted with a problem, think, "I know, I'll use threads,"
| and then two they hav erpoblesms. (@nedbat)
| RobotC 3rd Party Driver Suite: (http://rdpartyrobotcdr.sourceforge.net)
| Some people, when confronted with a problem, think, "I know, I'll use threads,"
| and then two they hav erpoblesms. (@nedbat)
Re: several commercial i2c sensors to connect at 1 NXT port?
that's amazing, not even I personally have thought that it might be that much!estimated 50% of all NXTs owned by adults
Maybe this fact will cause a change of hardware design for the future.
but let's close this thread before getting OT again.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Ahrefs [Bot], Bing [Bot], Semrush [Bot] and 2 guests