the lego movie fnac

the lego movie fnac

the lego movie florissant mo

The Lego Movie Fnac

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Robotics company Sphero partners with Disney to make pint-sized version of new Star Wars droid kids and big kids can now own Since its debut in the first trailer for Episode VII, cute little BB-8 - which looks an upturned bowl balancing on a football - has become the unofficial droid mascot of Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Unlike the much-loved robotic pal from the original trilogy, R2-D2, BB-8 is a droid with intelligence that you can actually buy – albeit in a tennis ball sized-version. The cute little robot seen in trailers is a rolling ball with a floating head, which played right into the hands of Sphero, who already had a rolling robot in the shape of the eponymous Sphero. All they had to do was figure out how to attach the head. Standing about 10cm tall with a head stuck on with magnets, BB-8 has everything you would expect from a collectors figure. A detail-rich paint job and enough sounds and quirks are able to convince you, with a touch of the suspension of disbelief, that he is more than just an expensive chunk of plastic.




Just like Sphero, BB-8 charges via induction in a Star Wars-branded cradle, is controlled via Bluetooth from an iPhone or Android smartphone and has a modicum of intelligence to sense its environment through bump mapping, similar to robot vacuums from iRobot and others. Sphero and Disney is hoping BB-8 becomes more than just a robotic ball with a magnetic head. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian Sphero’s involvement within Star Wars was a happy accident of being part of Disney’s startup accelerator, according to Rob Maigret, chief creative officer of Sphero: “BB-8 came about when Bob Iger, chief executive of Disney and mentor of Sphero, saw Sphero just as the company was gearing up to release Ollie. He showed Sphero’s founders Ian Bernstein and Adam Wilson a still from the movie of BB-8 and said, can you make this real?” Within a day Bernstein and Wilson had a working prototype, and production went from there. Sphero’s talent then had a hand in making the life-sized BB-8, which took to the stage at 2015’s Star Wars Celebration.




Sadly the full sized BB-8 is beyond reach – “the moulds alone cost $20,000”, according to Maigret, but the pint-sized version at least captures the spirit of the film’s prop. BB-8 will run for an hour between charges, taking three hours to reach full capacity, and can travel up to 30m from the user at speeds of up to 5mph. His head stares in the direction of travel, moving automatically and pops off when it crashes into a wall – which it will, frequently, even through it’s relatively easy to control using a virtual joystick on the smartphone screen. The smartphone controller app is filled with Star Wars noises, sights and sounds, and uses augmented reality to show BB-8 projecting holograms onto your floor. You can even record yourself using your smartphone camera and shoehorn your face into the classic “help me Obi Wan, you’re my only hope” – just forget that’s meant to be R2-D2. BB-8 sits sleeping in his inductive charging dock, which is powered by microUSB.




BB-8 has a couple of tricks up his sleeve. Shout “it’s a trap” into the phone and the little robot will run for the hills, while he’s able to display emotions using lights within it and a shake or two of the head. Whether you’ll understand what he’s saying without a protocol droid standing by remains to be seen. Right now BB-8 doesn’t do a lot, at least compared to Sphero or the company’s racing and skating robot Ollie. But it will provide buyers with tidbits from the film ahead of its release in December, and then reveal more features and personality after the film’s release. Its vignettes, for instance, feature a few classic Star Wars movies and noises, but will expand, while users will also be able to programme their own. BB-8 isn’t, however, including in Sphero’s educational programmes such as Spark, but that may change in the future. “BB-8 is a little computer in and of himself. Our dream is eventually to do away with the smartphone and allow you to talk to robots directly.




For now you can buy your own little bit of Star Wars,” said Maigret. BB-8 costs £129.99 and will be available direct from Disney and from major UK stores such as Firebox, PC World, Harrods and Amazon. Sphero Ollie review: the remote control car reimagined Robotic ball Sphero points to a new era in computer games Day 2 only 129 DKK extra Child - 468 - 428 DKK Adult - 488 - 448 DKK Senior - 468 - 428 DKK Free admission 200 days Save up to 15% on short breaks Children eat for free in select restaurants Nos boutiques à l'honneur Parcourir toutes les boutiques - Regalos para todas las edades - De 24 a 36 meses De 3 a 6 años De 7 a 9 años A partir de 10 años Ver todo Lego Duplo Ver todo Lego City Ver todo Lego Friends Ver todo Lego Star Wars VerLego Nexo Knights¡Heróicos caballeros! VerLego NinjagoMaestros del Spinjitzu Ver todo Lego Juniors Ver todo Lego Technic Ver todo Lego Elves Ver todo Lego Creator Ver todo Lego Ideas Ver todo Lego Bionicle LEGO, el logotipo de LEGO, DUPLO, el logotipo de MINIFIGURES, el logotipo de FRIENDS, NEXO KNIGHTS, NINJAGO, BIONICLE, MINDSTORMS y MIXELS son marcas registradas del Grupo LEGO.  




© 2016 The LEGO group.No matter how colorful the illustrations, no matter how spot on your Peppa Pig accent, sometimes kids just aren’t into reading books before bed. Throw on one of those night projectors that shine monkeys on the ceiling, however, and hot damn, you’ve got their attention. Obviously, you can see why a mom/former Google software engineer combined the 2 into this ViewMaster-esque phone projector to get her daughter to read more. Simply put, Moonlite is a portable projector that uses your phone’s flash to shine bedtime stories up on the wall or ceiling. Just insert the 12-image reel into glow-in-the-dark (!) device, snap it onto your smartphone, and read the book inside the free iOS/Android app. Words display on the phone’s screen, HD pics show up on the wall. It uses “page detection software,” so when you manually rotate the picture reel, the pages on your screen turn. Not only that, but each story includes relevant sound effects so you don’t have to continuously make elephant noises every time the story involves … well, an elephant.




It’s targeted at parents who are still reading to their children (ages 2- to 7-years old), rather than independent bookworms. And yes, before you climb onto your “kids and all the digital technology” screentime soapbox, you may have a point. While it’s “designed to limit blue light emissions, where it can, and display words with a dark, dim background,” it doesn’t completely eliminate the glow that could end up keeping Junior awake despite your best efforts to read him to sleep. Then again, your kid is at least into books again, rather than clawing to get back to the LEGOs. There are currently 7 titles available in the Moonlite library in a handful of categories, including “Reimagined Fairy Tales” (Little Red Riding Hood and Jack in the Beanstalk), original “Bedtime Stories” (What Will We Do Tomorrow? and It’s Time To Go To Sleep My Love), and “Educational” (Alphabet Fun). They’re also teaming up with Science Wide Open crew to celebrate female scientists and have a tap-the-words-to-read-along story in the works.

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