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From parking cars to wet laundry, bright young minds find an answer


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Posted

From parking cars to wet laundry, bright young minds find an answer
Visarut Sankham
The Nation

30273965-01_big.jpg
Jatsada Iamdaad, left, Gittipich Ittipol, middle, and Thitipoom Gusolsong, right, show the censor, used to measure moisture in the air, as part of their machine that can automatically keep clothes dry outside when it rains.

BANGKOK: -- TO SOLVE daily household problems, smart high schoolers at Banna Nayok Pittayakorn School in Nakhon Nayok's Ban Na district have come up with prototypes of three inventions -an automatic watering machine, an automatic dry washing-collecting device and a system to help motorists park their cars.

The three devices were unveiled last Friday during the Intel Galileo Gen 2 Board Toolkit workshop at Srinakharinwirot University's Ongkharak campus, as part of the school's computer course.

Mathayom 5 student Jatsada Iamdaad, who led the three-strong team which created the dry cloth-collecting device, told The Nation he was inspired by his mother's request to collect dry laundry from clothes lines outside the house, while he was occupied playing a computer game.

"I was thinking that I needed something to help me get the task done, so I could continue playing my game without being interrupted," the youngster said.

When the school launched a project calling for students' original ideas to solve daily problems, Jatsada put his head together with friends Gittipich Ittipol and Thitipoom Gusolsong, while a teacher gave them guidance. They came up with a device prototype that could be built in two weeks and cost only Bt500 out of the Bt3,500 budget sponsored by Intel.

The youngster explained: "This device would be able to tell whether it was raining or not by measuring moisture in the air. It has a motor [which could then switch in] to run rolling lines of clothes that were drying outside, back indoors."

For now, the prototype simply warned if it was raining, he said. It could be further developed by keeping records of air moisture levels on a daily basis or by access to the Meteorological Department's data, he said. Eventually, he saw it as part of the team's Smart House project to enable the electricity system in a house to easily support elderly residents.

Another team of Mathayom 5 students, Thananan Worrawongvuttikai, Sawate Sriwate, and Pennapa Sukpeng, built an automatic watering machine called "Water Plant".

They told The Nation the initial idea was Sawate's, who had been trying to work out the best time to water his vegetable garden. The prototype they created 10 months ago cost only Bt1,500 and had an Intel processor installed in it.

Sawate said the machine would measure moisture in the soil of the vegetable garden, and would automatically give water to plants when the soil was dry. It would stop watering when the measurement reading suggested a sufficient level of moisture in the soil.

Sawate also talked about developing this project further so the device's watering system could be remotely controlled via a cell-phone.

The device could also have a function to measure temperature and light so as to boost the watering system's accuracy, he said. A solar cell or a wind-wheel system could be adapted to generate power for the device, so it didn't need to be plugged in to the main power supply.

Another team of Mathayom 6 students built a parking assistance system that can tell motorists where vacant parking lots are. The prototype cost students Nutthapol Wadkhian, Channarong Monmeesil, and Thanaphat Sanphet only Bt500 and took two weeks to make.

The prototype provided each parking lot with a sensor to detect cars. It will signal a red light if a car is already parked in a bay, while a green light signal meant space was available. The system could be also upgraded by adding more sensors to accurately detect cars, they said.

Computer science teacher Porntip Tongtidram said the project was part of a new computer course launched two years ago and backed initially by the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology and sponsored by Intel.

The project was aimed at encouraging students with high potential in computer and science studies, she said, adding the school had supported these students by providing computer coding courses, sending them to competitions, including some robot building contests.

The course started in 2013 with 180 selected students out of the school's 2,600 students of Mathayom 1-6. Porntip said the school hoped to expand this kind of programme to other classrooms.

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/national/From-parking-cars-to-wet-laundry-bright-young-mind-30273965.html

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-- The Nation 2015-11-30

Posted

Necessity of playing computer games seems to be the mother of a completely worthless invention(##). My rain-detecting rock is far cheaper and just as efficient. Pity he couldn't help the author with a better spell-checker.

## My g/f uses under cover drying space FIRST, so that the sunlight doesn't fade clothes.

Posted

i have a cheaper an better method, drop computer game in rubbish, threaten kid with beating if washing gets wet.

Posted
The prototype provided each parking lot with a sensor to detect cars. It will signal a red light if a car is already parked in a bay, while a green light signal meant space was available. The system could be also upgraded by adding more sensors to accurately detect cars, they said

Now if that censor could also detect the time needed for a person about to leave to get their head off the phone so one would know about how long one may have to wait for that spot to open up... :P

Posted

That parking system is already used in Central Mall, Pattaya.

Central plaza pinklao also has it for over 2 years already.

Maybe they should check the originality of the inventions before reporting proudly about it. Otherwise a group of students will invent "electricity" next year.

Posted

That parking system is already used in Central Mall, Pattaya.

Central plaza pinklao also has it for over 2 years already.

Maybe they should check the originality of the inventions before reporting proudly about it. Otherwise a group of students will invent "electricity" next year.

well pretty much all of their ideas has been invented already...nonetheless its a good learning project for the kids who either have limited access to the internet or don't live in big cities to see and know about the type of stuff that are already out there

Posted

That parking system is already used in Central Mall, Pattaya.

Central plaza pinklao also has it for over 2 years already.

Maybe they should check the originality of the inventions before reporting proudly about it. Otherwise a group of students will invent "electricity" next year.

Dont be daft..they already did and Ive been told many a time it does not require an "earth"...despite that i stick to my antiquated earthing system

Posted

I'm all for students to be involved in projects at school, and encourage them to use these projects to develop ideas. However, I draw the line at these projects being promoted as 'New inventions'.

Posted

Jatsada Iamdaad, left, Gittipich Ittipol, middle, and Thitipoom Gusolsong, right, show the censor, used to measure moisture in the air, as part of their machine that can automatically keep clothes dry outside when it rains.

Maybe The Nation should have said "sensor"? There has been a lot of censorship in this country already.

Posted

Bright young minds here should be careful as there's no saying when this govt will see them as a potential threat. rolleyes.gifgigglem.gif

Or when their teachers will mistake their invention for a bomb and call the police and get them arrested

Posted

Bright young minds here should be careful as there's no saying when this govt will see them as a potential threat. rolleyes.gifgigglem.gif

Or when their teachers will mistake their invention for a bomb and call the police and get them arrested

Yes and the young lad in the US did quite well out of it with lots of favourable publicity, an invite to the White House and now has lodged a US$15 million lawsuit claiming he was ' traumatised '.

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