TurtleBot
TurtleBot is a personal robot kit with open source software. It was created at Willow Garage by Melonee Wise and Tully Foote in November 2010.[1]
| Developer | Community | 
|---|---|
| Written in | Various (Notably C++ and Python) | 
| OS family | ROS | 
| Working state | Current (TurtleBot 2) | 
| Source model | open source, open source hardware | 
| Initial release | 2011 | 
| Marketing target | Personal robots, mobile robots | 
| Default user interface | Many | 
| License | BSD, OSHW Statement of Principles and Definition v1.0 | 
Versions
    
    TurtleBot 1
    
TurtleBot 1 consists of an iRobot Create base, a 3000 mAh battery pack, a TurtleBot power board with gyro, a Kinect sensor, a Asus 1215N laptop with a dual core processor, and a hardware mounting kit attaching everything together and adding future sensors.
TurtleBot 2
    

TurtleBot 2 consists of an YUJIN Kobuki base, a 2200 mAh battery pack, a Kinect sensor, a Asus 1215N laptop with a dual core processor, fast charger, and a hardware mounting kit attaching everything together and adding future sensors.
TurtleBot 3
    

Turtlebot 3 has structural expansion capability due to ROBOTIS’ renowned modular structure with the DYNAMIXEL.
TurtleBot 4
    
Turtlebot 4 is using a iRobot Create3 robot as a base with a compute and sensor package consisting of a Raspberry PI 4, a Lidar and a RGB-D camera.
Community
    
TurtleBot has been used by research labs for doing multi-robot research and human robot interaction research. Many universities are also using the TurtleBot to teach introductory robotics courses.[2][3][4]
Licensing
    
TurtleBot is a licensed trademark that is maintained by the Open Source Robotics Foundation. The Open Source Robotics Foundation licenses the use of the TurtleBot trademark for manufacturing and distributing TurtleBot branded products.[5]
References
    
- "Interview: TurtleBot Inventors Tell Us Everything About the Robot". IEEE Spectrum.
- "University of South Carolina: CSCE574 Robotics". University of South Carolina.
- "Johns Hopkins University: ME530707". Johns Hopkins University.
- "School of Engineering Students Leading Robotics Research at St. Thomas". University of St. Thomas.
- "Become a TurtleBot Manufacturer or Distributor". Open Source Robotics Foundation.