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||<tablestyle="width:100%;text-align:center;" style="border:0px"> {{attachment:all_logos.png|ROSACE, RTRA-STAE, LAAS-CNRS, IRIT, ONERA logos | width=700px}} <<BR>> '''presents''' <<BR>> {{attachment:morse-logo.png|MORSE logo | width=300px}}|| | ||<tablestyle="width:100%;text-align:center;" style="border:0px"> {{attachment:all_logos.png|ROSACE, RTRA-STAE, LAAS-CNRS, IRIT, ONERA logos | width=700px}} <<BR>> <<BR>> '''presents''' <<BR>> <<BR>> {{attachment:morse-logo.png|MORSE logo | width=300px}}|| |
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MORSE, the OpenRobot Simulator
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Latest events |
MORSE Documentation |
First MORSE hackathon, 10-11 Jan 2011 |
Lastest version: MORSE documentation |
MORSE v.0.1.1: User guide (PDF) Dev guide (PDF) |
Jump to the installation instruction |
Main features
- A versatile simulator for generic mobile robots simulation (single or multi robots),
- Enabling realistic and dynamic environments (with other interacting agents -humans- or objects),
- Don't reinvent the wheel: critical components reused from other opensource projects (Blender for 3D rendering + physical simulation + UI, dedicated robotic middlewares for communications + robot hardware support),
- Seamless workflow: since the simulator rely on Blender for both modelling and the realtime 3D engine, creating and modifying a simulated scene is straigthforward.
- Entierely scriptable in Python,
- Adaptable to various level of simulation realism (for instance, we may want to simulate exteroceptive sensors like cameras in certain cases and access directly to a higher level representation of the world -like labelled artifacts- in other cases),
Currently compatible with YARP and LAAS OpenRobots robotics frameworks,
- Fully open source, BSD-compatible.
Learn more about MORSE on the documentation page