He was working the computer hooked up to the “crowd” on Thursday, and said it was fun to build everything – the only hard part was making sure all the respective computers and robots worked together well. There’s a motion sensor that detects the ball going through the goal, which sets the crowd off, explained Summit County student Eduardo Robles, who will be entering the sixth grade next year. The children are the ones controlling the Lego robots they built, through small laptops hooked-up nearby. But after a longer look, one realizes the Legos actually move and make sounds – the kicker kicks, the goalie tries to block and a crowd actually cheers. Three boys huddled around a set of Legos at Dillon Valley Elementary Thursday afternoon, playing with what at a quick first glance, is a pretty impressive re-creation of a soccer game.
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