![]() ![]() ![]() The other ports are all either digital or analogue (or both if you know what you’re doing). Port 4 is the only sensor port capable of communicating over RS485 (a serial protocol). Btw, it’s not a serial port, the NXT and sensor communicate through I2C, which is a different protocol than standard serial. The nice thing about the MyBlocks is that they’re fairly easy to use and don’t require a lot of knowledge about the sensor’s internals. So, instead of being a 'limited' trial, the 30 day trial will allow you to use ROBOTC just as if you owned the full version. The folder under program files is about 125MB for around 1500 files (a lot are NXT examples). Hey all, I am looking to maybe test RobotC out before next year. A lot of us MCPs thinks it’s confusing and unnecessary. Hey Ken, The whole Retail vs Edu thing flares up quite often on the MCP forums, trust me. The NXT education set has a different collection of bricks and sensors than the retail variant and does not come with software. Brian Davis wrote something for it, which you can download from this page: Just to clarify: NXT is the robot, NXT-G is the programming language and environment.īoth of these come in a retail and education variant. I am not sure why you thought you were downloading the education version of NXT-G 2.0? There are other ways to access that temperature sensor from NXT-G using MyBlocks. The LEGO article even mentions the box number for the NXT 2.0 set. NXT-G 2.0 comes in two flavours, retail and education. ![]()
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