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304 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2022
Yes, those small square plastic pieces still filled my life, and I didn’t tire of them. Especially not since I’d built the first prosthesis when I was nine, helped by a shoelace, some Bionicle robots that I began to experiment with dismantling, some adhesive tape, and the classic LEGO bricks. That was how I started with the . With them I felt like a mad scientist creating his small army of little monsters...
I’ve always been noticeable because of my bracito. People have always pointed me out because of it, and I’ve received “special� treatment, as if I am weaker than the rest: an invalid, a cripple, a poor manco! But now, instead of seeing it as a lack or a defect, they saw it as something positive and advantageous, like a unique and different characteristic.
What’s important is I managed to arrive in Houston a few hours before my talk at the NASA Cross Industry Innovation Summit of Technology, where I’d been invited to present the prosthetics I’d built by then and speak of future projects I was working on. In my computer I carried one of the secrets reserved for the attendees of the event: the 3D design of my MK-5, built and conceived with the new LEGO Education pieces called SPIKE Prime that are going to revolutionize teaching.
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“Ingenuity, perseverance, and resilience,� read the headline. They were the three foundations on which I had managed to construct the MK-1 and MK-2 and on which I would build the MK-3. When copies of the magazine arrived, I was thinking about it, the MK-3, in breaks from my studies. It would be based on an impressive yellow LEGO Technic crane.