MIT grad student David Merrill demos Siftables -- cookie-sized, computerized tiles you can stack and shuffle in your hands. These future-toys can do math, play music, and talk to their friends, too. Is this the next thing in hands-on learning?
This is pretty cool; an MIT grad student developed smart toy blocks that can interact with each other. The blocks can display letters, numbers, do math, and even play music. This'll probably end up being the next generation "toy blocks".
before you know, we will have robots walking and talking on the streets like regular people .
very sci-fi XD
Show me what it's like, to be the last one standing~~
And teach me wrong from right, and I'll show you what I can be~~
And say it for me, say it to me~~
And I'll leave this life behind me~~
Say it if it's worth saving me~~
Nah, the little child just piled em up XP
I like the idea of the toy, but I bet it would get boring for me after few days... Like this colour mixing stuff - i get all the colours, was funny, but I can't use them... no painting.
Technical toys get boring because they have limited number of options, but toy blocks or crayons give you so many possibilities to create things <3
If my wish is to be granted, please bring me to you right now.
If life can be repeated, I'll go to you many times over
There's nothing else that I want,
Nothing else is more important than you.
Yea, with crayons you can draw on the walls. parents are especially happy when their kids do that .
I used to do that XD.
Show me what it's like, to be the last one standing~~
And teach me wrong from right, and I'll show you what I can be~~
And say it for me, say it to me~~
And I'll leave this life behind me~~
Say it if it's worth saving me~~
Reminds me of my classes recently. One of them is an introduction to abstract data structures or something like that. It's essentially just learning about how to model relationships in a way that makes sense to people and can still be used by computers.
Makes me wonder how human/machine interaction will change. In the opposite direction, one of my other classes in an introduction to Unix. The professor told us how he used to operate a computer from a deckwriter. Really old technology O.o