Building a real-life Wall-E: how kids helped Lego Technic and Volvo design the autonomous Zeux wheel loader

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
make their first steps towards architectural greatness
Likewise, the more advanced Lego Technic line has fostered an interest in mechanics and engineering, with its motorised components and
remote controlled models requiring a little more expertise to assemble.But thanks to an ongoing partnership between Lego Technic and Volvo,
the Lego Technic line, a 1,167-piece wheel loader that comes with articulated four-wheel steering, a working boom and bucket and an active
collaboration, a mixture of Volvo designers and engineers and Lego Technics designers, capturing that knowledge of how real machines should
rendered model, intended as a blueprint for future AI-driven vehicles, appears far more personable than most of the relatively-faceless
autonomous vehicles we see in development at the moment
the process
We give them products to look at, we give them products to build with, we let them play with stuff and basically let us direct our design
This time we collected the three favourite directions that we had from the different concepts at the time, we benchmarked it against the
to be a conceptual showcase for construction products of the future, it proved particularly insightful into the expectations of which
children have for the world around them as they grew up
And, with the design resulting in numerous patents being awarded and elements being worked on for real-world application, in this project
upon, and points to the level of familiarity and easiness with which youngsters are already approaching concepts around autonomous
and all of its features, knows exactly where it is
junction you instinctively make eye contact with the driver
know that
products
You have the cars already, planes, drones
a Transformer or something like that
determined
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