View allAll Photos Tagged Arduino,
Our fall Arduino 101 class at Tam Makers is off to a great start. I taught this evening course with my associates Donald Day and Edward Janne on September 14, 2016, at the woodshop in Tam High School in Mill Valley.
We welcomed a wonderful group of seven students, including adults with diverse backgrounds, as well as a high school student. We started by giving our students an overview of the popular Arduino board. We then learned how to light up an LED, add a button to turn it on and off, and play a sound with a piezzo buzzer.
Students accomplished all these steps successfully, and seemed to really enjoy this class and told us they learned a lot from it. We’re really happy that this course is going so well and we look forward to teaching next week’s class.
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-fall-2016
Check out our course slides:
bit.ly/arduino-101-slides-fall-2016
Learn more about Tam Makers:
You can grab the design for the orange Arduino-holder here: faketakemake.posterous.com/la-basetta-in-plexi-per-arduin...
Using the Arduino Uno to drive two Nikon dSLRs, to generate a slow-motion video of the shutter action of one of the cameras. (The laptop is just supplying power.) Resultant video and details.
A keypad and an LED display driven by an Arduino. Based on www.arduino.cc/playground/Main/KeypadTutorial
Soon to be networked.
My Dumb Arduino Mega had the AIN0 pin disconnected .... so I went about connecting it to a wire. -Sigh- I never should have bought this Arduino.
The Arduino diecimila prototyping board which I use for my hobby hacking.
Currently being used as an interface for a galvanic skin response meter (biofeedback device) in conjunction with a small app. written in processing.
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
Sean and I built this little Arduino project to change the number depending on the intensity of the light.
This photo was an 1st attempt to create an arduino mount that would be compliant with the contraptor hardware prototyping framework.
After a rough start getting the laptops to recognize the Sparkfun boards, participants in the Arduino 101 class learned to flash LED's - the first step into the world of embedded electronics.
The Jocelyn H. Lee Innovation Lab celebrated the Arduino's 10th birthday by hosting an 'Arduino Sandbox' session - an opportunity for participants to explore the basics of the Arduino platform using our Sparkfun Inventor Kits.
03:00 p.m.
Manufacturing Digital Art
In the 90s digital art was referring to immateriality, now the society has a more natural relationship with technologies, thus letting what is immaterial to become real, and experimenting new interaction processes between man and machine, that has completely become part of everyday life in the meantime. Manufacturing is also referring to digital art, where such equipment as Arduino and the explosive advent of 3D printers and devices for digital manufacturing led to integrate what is digital into what is real.
- Massimo Banzi, Arduino co-founder
- Fabio Franchino and Giorgio Olivero, artists
I got my arduino + accessories from ladyada.net / adafruit.com, and wanted to check that everything worked. At first I thought I bought a broken LCD screen - the pin numbers on the tutorial were different from those in the sample program. Once I figured that out everything worked, and now I just have to get on making the rest of this project...