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This is where the fun will happen. For now, it's forwarding whatever comes down the serial interface from the USB socket. I'd quite like to get an ethernet shield so I can remove the laptop from the equation. Spot the dodgy soldering, wrapped in masking tape.

 

More info: rooreynolds.com/category/microprinter/

The Brain (Arduino Duemilanove)

Arduino Uno with 2 Robot Power Mega Moto shields. Base is laser cut from Ponoko.

 

Shot w/Canon G12 using two radio triggered 430EX IIs.

The Create Command Module's innards are very similar to an Arduino. If you already have an Arduino, you can easily hook it up to the Create and get the same effect.

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:

www.tammakers.org/

 

Arduino Mini Pinout Diagram

Finished. The kits will get available online. Will post where and when. If someone is interested drop me a comment, than have at least a clue if its usefull.

My first Arduino project using a protoboard. A simple digital input/output example.

Reactive music piece.

 

An Arduino Lilypad with an accelerometer controlling an LED that modulates a Bleep Labs Thingamagoop.

 

Just walking past it will set it off.

This is the newest version of my arduino temperature sensor setup. Tonight I migrated to an Uno R3 from a Duemilanove and added a wireless shield. I then wrote a little web server so the thing doesn't need to be hooked to a machine via USB to read the sensors attached to it. Now it can sit in a corner in my kitchen and I can poll it from anywhere inside my network, which is mainly nice because I don't need it tethered to a server of some kind. I need to make a case of some kind for it.

 

Right now cricket is running on my laptop, but tomorrow I should get back an older macbook pro I sent off for repairs, and it will become my all around home server / entry into my home network, so I can move the poller/grapher/web server to it and gain a remote entry way into other devices in my network, like my raid, in the process.

 

I also have on order a waterproof version of the same temperature sensor I am already using, and I'm going to add it to this set up and run it outside. That way instead of scraping wunderground's nearby weather station to graph the outdoor temp vs the indoor temp, I can grab the data from exactly at my place and using exactly the same type of sensor.

 

I also did some cricket hacking to get the graphing done up how I wanted it. I actually remember quite a bit of perl. Which is...something. I even sent a bunch of notes about installing cricket on Mountain Lion to cricket-users. Though, that list seems incredibly dead.

 

I am way, way too pleased with this project.

Another Arduino video (a better one this time, hopefully) from GGM09.

Made with Oomlout's development kit: oomlout.com/ards.html

Arduino Lilypad with extra-large labeling of signal names (including some alternates.)

Tired of our projects getting finished and being nothing more than a mush of wires we decided to design ourselves a box. After many iterations we've settled on one that requires just over an A4 (letter) sheet worth of acrylic and four nuts and bolts to assemble.

 

(For all the details visit our blog oomlout.co.uk/?p=369 )

Playing with some LED's and a little Arduino processor

Arduino Leonardo Pinout

3-day Arduino Academy, a summer program offered by Catalyst, 7-9 July 2014. catalyst.net.nz/academy

Hacking my Decimila to allow direct programming of the ATMega168 by bit-banging the USB-Serial port with Avrdude.

 

Here you can see where the other ends of the jumpers are plugged in.

Red is in 11

Yellow is in 12

Green is in 13

Black is in RESET

 

More info here: www.ladyada.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=5102

Arduino Mega 2560, with wires soldered to headers. This is a prototype, the finished project will be much cleaner.

My first Arduino project using a protoboard. A simple digital input/output example.

Date and Time

 

The time can be adjusted for different timezones and daylight savings time

 

More information and source code available at: www.seancarney.ca/projects/arduino-gps-receiver/arduino-g...

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