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Arduino Workshop at iLab
Interaktive Werkstatt
School of Design Mainz, 2009
Workshop with Andreas Muxel
Photographs by Sandy Pfaff
Breadboard hooked up to arduino, hooked up to ethernet shield hooked up to Citizen CBM-231 receipt printer.
Now available: the Centipede Shield is an add-on PCB for standard layout (Duemilanova, Diecimila) Arduino microcontroller boards. It uses the Wire I2C interface on analog pins 4 and 5 to provide 64 general purpose I/O pins.
Also fine-tuning homebuilt lightbox photo process...
Network wind chime reads weather data of previously chosen cities randomly from Google weather API. It drives fan in proportion to their wind speed. Made with Arduino, ethernet shield, MOSFET, LCD and cooling fan.
RGB colour sensor data collected by Arduino Blend Micro. Data is sent to iPhone over Bluetooth Low-Energy.
Our third Arduino 101 class at Tam Makers went really well. I taught this evening course with co-instructor Donald Day on Thursdays, from June 16 to 30, 2016, at the woodshop in Tam High School in Mill Valley.
We worked with an enthusiastic group of seven students, including adults with diverse backgrounds, as well as a couple high school students. Our partner Geo Monley worked both as a mentor and as a student during the hands-on sessions.
We started the class at 6pm, by giving students an overview of how circuits work. We then learned how to use a multimeter, how to solder electronics, and how to control rainbow-colored NeoPixel lights.
Students seemed to really enjoy this class and told us they learned a lot from it. Several expressed an interest in taking intermediate and advanced classes in the future. This is one of our first maker courses at Tam Makers, and we’re really happy that it is going so well; we look forward to teaching more classes in the fall.
View more photos of this Arduino course:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157659914570948
Learn more about this Arduino 101 class:
www.tammakers.org/arduino-101/
Read our Arduino 101 Guide:
bit.ly/arduino-101-guide-june-2016
Check out our course slides:
bit.ly/arduino-101-slides-june-2016
Learn more about Tam Makers:
I made a few of these so I could run Arduino code without tying up the actual Arduino. The sockets are made by attacking an unsuspecting turned-pin DIL socket with a Dremel cut-off wheel. It can be programmed via SPI connections using the Arduino-ISP sketch or any other ISP.
Yaam (Yet Another Ambient Munny).
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Munny hooked up to an Arduino that lights up the same color as the status reported by Office Communicator. In this example, the Munny is glowing green since my status is "Online".
For project details, visit nithin.spaces.live.com. Source code available at yaam.codeplex.com.
Arduino Academy, a 3-day summer programme for students in New Zealand, 7-9 July 2014. Catalyst IT was the organizer.
We taught a workshop on how to create interactive art with the Arduino platform at the Mill Valley Library on October 24, 2015.
We showed 9 students how to make lights blink, sounds play, motors move, and how to add more color with neopixel LEDs, as described in this online guide we created for the workshop:
At the end of the workshop, we asked participants if they would like to this again, and the answer was a resounding yes! Participants told us they learned a lot from this workshop and would not only come back for future workshops, but also recommend this program to their friends.
Instructors for this workshop were Donald Day and Fabrice Florin, with support from Natalie and Jean Bolte. We are all members of Pataphysical Studios, the art collective behind the ‘Pataphysical Slot Machine’, our poetic oracle.
Come visit the exhibit this month! We’re open every Saturday and Sunday in October, from 1 to 5pm, in the downstairs conference room of the Mill Valley Library.
Special thanks to the Mill Valley Library and the Friends of the Library for making these workshops possible — especially Kristen Clarke, who helped us get the Arduino parts and set up for the workshop.
View more photos of the exhibit: www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157659147117739
UPDATE: You can see a proven and working implementation on this gadget.
Not visible [D'oh!] Red solders to Female DB-9 connector pin 2, Green to pin 3, and Black to pin 5.
I looked around some and there is a Freeduino schematic available which suggests that I should have 1kOhm resistors between the Arduino and the Max232.
The schematic (http://spiffie.org/electronics/archives/2008/03/08/Duino232-2.html) also suggests bringing out DTR to the reset line via a 104 capacitor for the auto-reset capability.
I tried this but wasn't successful. I believe the problem, though, is my USB-RS232 adapter. I will try to find another one.
UPDATE: I have since been quite successful and have even demonstrated the ability to download code, with a working auto-reset via DTR. I think this image has some caps reversed and no resistors between the arduino and the MAX232. I strongly recommend lifting the connections from the Freeduino-Serial schematic.
My Arduino USB from 2005 toured India with me when I was lecturing at Pune, Bombay, Bangalore, NID ... The USB connector was opposite as it should so I cut a wire and solder the cables straight to the board
Reloj gigante hecho con Arduino y Marmol.
Más información y código fuente aqui:
blog.bricogeek.com/noticias/tutoriales/bricoclock-reloj-g...