/poppy-torso

Poppy Torso is an open-source and 3D printed torso robot. Optimized for research and education purposes, its modularity allows for a wide range of applications and experimentations.

Primary LanguageJupyter Notebook

Poppy Torso

PyPI

Poppy Torso is an open-source and 3D printed humanoid robot powered by Python 3 and Snap programming languages. Optimized for research and education purposes, its modularity allows for a wide range of applications and experimentations.

Poppy Torso is actually the upper body of Poppy Humanoid with a specific part so it can be easily fixed on a table.

Build your own Poppy Torso

You can buy a complete kit on the Génération Robots website for 5300€.

You can also buy all components needed by your own. The full BOM is available here >> Bill Of Material.

The STL files are available in the releases of this repository.

Then the process to assemble a complete Poppy Torso takes about a day. The assembly process is fully documented with video tutorials.

For more informations, refer to the assembly instructions.

Install poppy-torso

Install a Poppy board

Poppy Humanoid is shipped with a Raspberry Pi. Older Odroid versions are available in the releases. In order to install the board byb yourself,refer to the poppy documentation.

Install on your personnal computer

If you want to install the software locally and not use the embedded board to control the robot or if you are working with the simulator, you will have to install Python. Install poppy-torso: simply type pip install poppy-torso.

For more informations, refer to the poppy documentation.

Support

Documentation lacks something, you need support? The Poppy forum is the best (and single) place to ask for help !

You can in particular check for the Poppy Humanoid category.

Contribution

If you are interrested by contribuing to the Poppy project, you can take a look at open issues and call for contributions.

Morevover, the Poppy project involves a very large scope of disciplines:

  • Engineering fields such as computer science, mechanics, electronics, machine learning...
  • Humanities such as cognitive science, psychology...
  • Life science such as biology, biomechanics,...
  • Community management, scientific mediation, communication...
  • Design such as web design, object design, UX,...
  • Art with the need of animator to create the illusion of life and emotions.

So there are many ways to contribute to this project and you are very welcome to do it.

Maybe the first step is to become a member of the community on the poppy forum. The forum is the very central place to exchange with users and contributors. You can freely come and talk about your project or ideas with your prefered language.

For github ninja, you can of course fork this repository and open pull requests to propose your changes, or create issues to notify a problem.

License

All the technological development work made in the Poppy project is freely available under open source licenses. Only the name usage "Poppy" is restricted and protected as an international trademark, please contact us if you want to use it or have more information.

License Hardware Software
Title Creatives Commons BY-SA GPL v3
Logo Creative Commons BY-SA GPL V3

Please keep references to the Poppy project (www.poppy-project.org) and the its contributors when you use or fork this work.

The Poppy project history

The Poppy project is born in 2012 in the Flowers laboratory at Inria Bordeaux Sud-Ouest. It was initiated during Matthieu Lapeyre's PhD Thesis surpervised by Pierre Yves Oudeyer. At the beginning, the development team was composed by Matthieu Lapeyre (mechanics & design), Pierre Rouanet (software) and Jonathan Grizou (electronics).

This project is initially a fundamental research project financed by ERC Grant Explorer to explore the role of embodiement and morphology properties on cognition and especially on the learning of sensori-motor tasks. It is now hosted by the Poppy Station non-profit.

More on the project