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Received the Arduino Experimenter's kit for Christmas. I'll be documenting my experience as part of my project365 blog ( daeye.wordpress.com ).
In the second night of the Arduino Workshop at the Jocelyn H. Lee Innovation Lab, students worked with multi-color LEDs, motors and LCD displays.
Arduino is a nifty little electronics kit for learning how to prototype electronics. Here's the simple binary counter I built using parts contained in the starter kit at adafruit.com.
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
Having fun with my new Arduino Uno.
This (very basic) project is based on the tutorial found here: www.ladyada.net/learn/arduino/lesson3.html
An intervalometer releases the camera shutter at a set interval - useful for time lapse photography. This is my first prototype. Shutter release works well. The buttons will be used for interval programming (not functioning yet)
And yes, I know the pushbutton is not actually able to do anything, this is just a "in the middle of it" actionshot.
Instant case: Arduino NG mounted in an old Dysan diskette box. A pair of piezo discs for noisemaking. Plus Tarquin the cat, bathing. (Our roommate dubbed him "Tarquino Neutrino". If I ever make my own board based on the Arduino, I may have to steal the name.)
A laser trigger was set up to take photos (and fire a flash) of everyone who passed through the doorway of the code.lab space.
The images were then sent to a computer which analyzed them as they were received and attempted to detect faces. (badly)