Back in 2013, brothers Rohit and Sidharth Srinivasan visited an orphanage in India. They wanted to share their love of science and engineering with the kids, but there weren’t any low-cost tools to help their mission. “We saw the education gap, and we wanted to fill it,” says Rohit. So the brothers created Trashbots, a programming platform and kit. Kids use the $100 kits to make robots with materials they have lying around their homes—from Popsicle sticks to used markers. Then they get to program it! Each kit contains a motor, accessories, software to control the robot, and educational materials to use Trashbots in the classroom.
Rohit and Sidharth Srinivasan are brothers. In 2013, they visited an orphanage in India. They wanted to share their love of science and engineering with the kids. But there weren’t any affordable tools to help them. “We saw the education gap, and we wanted to fill it,” says Rohit. So the brothers created Trashbots. These $100 kits help kids make robots using materials they might have lying around—from Popsicle sticks to old markers. Each kit contains a motor, software to control the robot, and educational materials. The brothers worked to perfect the product before starting to sell it about a year ago.