Dirty

The Origin Prototype

Dirty is the very first prototype in the robotics ecosystem—a true Frankenstein build created to validate core technologies before refinement. Its primary purpose was experimentation: testing robot-to-robot communication, data exchange, and autonomous transfers between units.

Dirty laid the foundation for everything that followed. It proved that decentralized communication between robots was not only possible, but scalable—serving as the backbone concept for future, more refined designs.

Dirty Robot

See Dirty in Action

Key Features

Robot-to-Robot Communication

First successful implementation of autonomous communication protocols between multiple robot units.

Data Exchange Protocol

Experimental framework for sharing sensor data, status updates, and coordination messages.

Autonomous Transfers

Proof of concept for autonomous resource allocation and task distribution between units.

Foundation Architecture

Modular design that became the template for all subsequent robot development.

System Architecture

DIRTY #1 Communication Module DIRTY #2 Communication Module Data Exchange Autonomous Protocol Resource Transfer Sensors Sensors Decentralized Communication Architecture Experimental prototype validating autonomous robot-to-robot protocols

Technical Specifications

The Legacy

While Dirty may look like a collection of parts held together with determination and duct tape, it represents something far more significant. This prototype proved that autonomous robots could communicate, coordinate, and transfer resources without centralized control. Every robot that followed—from Discret's invisible utility to Lampi's dynamic lighting—stands on the foundation Dirty built. It wasn't pretty, but it worked. And sometimes, that's exactly what matters most.