A successful connection, Operating the aria demonstration client, Perating the – Pioneer 2TM User Manual

Page 32: Aria d, Emonstration, Lient

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Quick Start

A Successful Connection

Table 2. ARIA demo operation modes

MODE

HOT

K

EY

DESCRIPTION

laser

l

Displays the closest and furthest readings
from the robot’s laser range finder

io

i

Displays the state of the robot’s digital
and analog-to-digital I/O ports

position

p

Displays the coordinates of the robot’s
position relative to its starting location

bumps

b

Displays the status of the robot’s bumpers

sonar

s

Displays the robot’s sonar readings

camera

c

Controls and exercises the robot’s pan-
tilt-zoom robotic camera

gripper

g

Controls, exercises, and displays status of
the robot’s Gripper

wander

w

Sends the robot to move around at its own
whim, while avoiding obstacles

teleop

t

Allows the user to drive and steer the
robot via the keyboard or a joystick
connected to the computer

ARIA prints out lots of diagnostic text as it negotiates a connection with the robot. If

successful, the client requests various AROS servers to start their activities, including sonar
polling, position integration, and

so on. The microcontroller

sounds an audible connection
cue, and you should hear the

robot’s sonar ping with a

distinctive and repetitive
clicking. In addition, the
motors-associated STATUS LED

on the User Control Panel should

light continuously (was flashing

slowly while awaiting
connection). Note that the

ARIA demo automatically

engages your robot’s motors
though a special client

command. Normally, the

motors are disengaged when
first connecting.

The amber SERIAL port

indicator LEDs on the robot’s

User Control Panel should blink

to indicate ARIA-client to AROS-
server communications, too.


O

PERATING THE

ARIA

D

EMONSTRATION

C

LIENT

When connected with the ARIA demo client, your robot becomes responsive and

intelligent. For example, it moves cautiously. Although it may drive toward an obstacle,
your ActivMedia robot will not crash because the ARIA demo includes obstacle-

avoidance behaviors which enable the robot to detect and actively avoid collisions.

The ARIA demo displays a menu of robot
operation options. The default mode of
operation is teleop. In teleop mode, you

drive the robot manually, using the arrow

keys on your keyboard or a joystick
connected to the client PC’s joystick port

(as opposed to a joystick port on the

robot).

Table 2. Keyboard teleoperation

KEY

ACTION

Increment forward velocity

Decrement forward velocity

Incremental left turn

Incremental right turn

space

All stop

While driving from the keyboard, each

keypress speeds the robot forward or

backward or incrementally changes its
direction incrementally. For instance, when turning, it is often useful to press the left- or

right-turn key rapidly several times in a row, because the turn increment is small.

The other modes of ARIA demo operation give you access to your robot’s various sensors
and accessories, including encoders, sonar, laser, Gripper, a pan-tilt-zoom robotic

camera, I/O port states, bumpers, and more. Accordingly, use the ARIA demo not only

26

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3TM