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Arduino Workshop at iLab
Interaktive Werkstatt
School of Design Mainz, 2009
Workshop with Andreas Muxel
Photographs by Sandy Pfaff
Gotta show off a little! I've had an itch to get back into microcontrollers for a while and finally bit the bullet and went for it! At my young age, I gotta keep the ol' brain active!
The Arduino micros are cheap and a very inexpensive way to create all kinds of fun projects! Programmable with C/C++ language, I've actually been able to remember quite a bit. It's been years!
"Hello World!" is the classic first code most folks write for almost every programming language.
Btw... the microprocessor is that tiny thing on the left with the red power LED. It's an Arduino Nano.
A new version
A new version of the venerable Arduino Breakout Shield.
More info at make.rrrf.org/ab-1.4
EST's DC jack MJ-R02 has nice switch. It can be soldered onto Arduino Leonardo (without header). I call it Switchuino :-)
For our second project, we had to use our two words (mine were Edible Email Notifier) to create something using an Arduino. I made my email notifier fully functional, with a lot of time dedicated to coding.
Arduino Workshop at iLab
Interaktive Werkstatt
School of Design Mainz, 2009
Workshop with Andreas Muxel
Photographs by Sandy Pfaff
for the copy and the icons. I'm a big fan of this font. The images are printed onto card and spray mounted onto sponge board.
Arduino Nano CH340G with smoke and gas sensor MQ2 and Nokia5110 LCD.
A Nokia 5110 LCD adapter can be also seen in the photo, with a ISP ATtiny85 shield, homemade.
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:
Arduino driving an LCD 240x320 ILI9341, showing humidity and temperature collected by DHT22 sensor.
Also maximum and minimum values are tracked and displayed.
On the breadboard is also installer an RTC board, but it's doing nothing for this matter. It's for a next project.
PS:
Side effects of copy-paste on code.
Forgot to change "ºC" to "%" on MAX and MIN of Humidity readings.
Plugged into a breadboard, driving a DC motor and LED. Powered by an external power supply but still programmable over the USB-to-serial connection. (something normal Arduino can't do)
Arduino Workshop at iLab
Interaktive Werkstatt
School of Design Mainz, 2009
Workshop with Andreas Muxel
Photographs by Sandy Pfaff
Sticker based on Tod E. Kurt's design:
todbot.com/blog/2009/05/23/arduino-chip-sticker-label/
I printed his out and couldn't read the labels, so made one with much bigger text.
I laser print onto Avery sticker paper, then put clear packing tape on top so the toner stays put, then cut it before removing the backing to stick it onto a chip.