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circuit a combination of two circuits:
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 Jean Bolte and her daughter Natalie. 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
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.
RGB colour sensor data collected by Arduino Blend Micro. Data is sent to iPhone over Bluetooth Low-Energy.
finally, it's here! time to get back into basic hardware experimentations i used to do with STAMP years ago...
from www.arduino.cc/:
What is Arduino?
Arduino is an open-source physical computing platform based on a simple i/o board, and a development environment for writing Arduino software. The Arduino programming language is an implementation of Wiring, itself built on Processing.
Arduino can be used to develop interactive objects, taking inputs from a variety of switches or sensors, and controlling a variety of lights, motors, and other outputs. Arduino projects can be stand-alone, or they can be communicate with software running on your computer (e.g. Flash, Processing, MaxMSP.) The boards can be assembled by hand or purchased preassembled; the open-source IDE can be downloaded for free.
An arduino test case circuit to demonstrate the use of parallel in/serial out, and serial in/parallel out shift registers (in this case the PC74HCT165P and 73JE75K respectively).
This is the PCB layout file for the Arduino. I am just displaying the pads. I added some graphics to illustrate the locations of the headers relative to one another.
Just finished soldering up the Ladyada Arduino Ethernet Shield. My actual WizNet card hasn't come yet (it will go in the two mult-row black headers when it does).
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, as well as Kristen Clarke from the Mill Valley Library (pictured here). 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
This is a simple way to start designing your own Arduino shield. Download here: macetech.com/blog/node/69
Evento em agosto de 2014 no Olabi, Rio de Janeiro. Mais informações: www.olabi.co
Crédito: +5521 Fotografia www.facebook.com/mais5521?fref=ts
Arduino Workshop at iLab
Interaktive Werkstatt
School of Design Mainz, 2009
Workshop with Andreas Muxel
Photographs by Sandy Pfaff
Although I have no scientific reasoning, by common sense I'm tempted to believe the higher humidity reading. It was pouring rain for this outdoor test. Two DHT22 sensors with the same arduino code were acceptable for temperature values, but humidity readings were pretty far apart.
Running one of the examples from the dogm128 library. I plan to use this to show live graphs for spacensus.
I've seen pictures of Arduino programmed chips on a breadboard with a serial connector, but not with a USB-Serial converter. Might be helpful to some others. Use this in comparison: www.arduino.cc/en/Hacking/PinMapping
My first Arduino Serial from 2005, the sticker "boot1" shows it is the first type of bootloader I was trying. We made the holes for the power jack a little small, the ones we had in the lab didn't fit
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
Arduino HFDay Hardware Freedom Day 2013. wiki.hfday.org/2013/Argentina/La%20Plata/Equipo%20La%20Plata