
Do you?
Yenka is a very powerful tool to use free for personal use.
Also very educational and useful if you want to test or play with electro and electronics without the cost of real parts.
But not only electronics are present.
Link: http://www.syntheticthought.com/st/robotics/59-general/48-robotics-ai-and-ethics
Syntheticthought dot com has released a very intresting post about what rights and issues there possibly could be.
Quote from the mail i received on this.
"Over the past half century, researchers and engineers have primarily
been interested in the the technical aspects of artificial
intelligence and robotics. However, as technology becomes more
advanced some are starting to examine a concept that is typically
restricted to the realm of human interactions - ethical behavior."
So if your intrested go to syntheticthought dot com
I have my programmer ordered, and i expecting it this week.
It's the K8084 from Velleman.

It's quit handy to check your input and outputs of your [[en:PIC_microcontroller]].
More on P(rogrammable)I(ntergrated)C(ircuit).
Check out the [[en:Microcontroller]] or the [[en:PIC_microcontroller]] on Wikipedia 4 more explaining.
There are loads of tutorials and how 2 on that.
Practical PIC projects
What are [[en:BEAM]]robots, some explaining on that you find at [[en:Wikipedia]]
On makezine.com is a small "Beginner's Guide to [[en:BEAM]]".
It's a really small guidance about the basic [[en:BEAM]]ing bot.

You like beamrobotics?
You can also go to solarbotics.net to find a lot of articles and tutorials on how to build your [[en:BEAM]] robot.