View allAll Photos Tagged lcd,
Here the display interface for the setup2010. The AVR controller stay into the basis interface module and is connected by SPI at high speed. The CPLD module can also read all the inputs. Max input elements is 24. The outputs drive the LCD display, background lighting, 4 leds and 2 spare lines. Power is 3.3V and 5V on the 10 pins interface connector from the CPLD Interface module.
LCD Soundsystem
live @ The Hard Rock Live
presented by Foundation Presents
Orlando ,FL 10/05/10
*Photos by CKG Photography©
GoodsWell.com - 19", 32" and 40" LCD Digital Signage / Advertising LCD Player - Play Rolling Text and Splite Screen, Network function.
Here is our 32" Digital Signage Products Photos and Products Videos for your reference:
You may download it from our FTP server:
ftp://public:public@goodswell.serveftp.com
GoodsWell (Since 2000 Year)
Hong Kong - TEL: +852 2139-5781 (English)
Manufactory of China
Shanghai, Nanjing and Hefei, Head Office Tel: +86 21 3319-9936 (Mandarin)
E-Mail: info@goodswell.net Web Site: www.goodswell.com
Fri 7 & Sat 8 December London Contemporary Dance School: Music Collaborations
Celebrating the work of students from London’s top creative schools, Collaborations sees third year choreography students at LCDS join creative forces work with composers from Guildhall School of Music & Drama to create bold and imaginative pieces of choreography.
Akhirnya termakbul juga hajat aku nak beli monitor TFT-LCD (17"). Tapi tu pun aku beli guna duit pinjaman aku dan tambah seciput ja duit yang ada dalam simpanan aku. Boleh tahan jugak la harga monitor LCD ni sebab design monitor ni agak cantik. Well, aku harap lepas ini aku akan lebih bersemangat untuk buat kerja(assignment), amek gambar dan main game.
Setlist from the final LCD Soundsystem show:
Set 1
Intro ("I´m Not In Love" by 10 cc)
1. Dance Yrself Clean
2. Drunk Girls
3. I Can Change
4. Time To Get Away
5. Get Innocuous!
6. Daft Punk Is Playing At My House
7. Too Much Love
8. All My Friends
9. Tired
(with "Heart of the Sunrise" by Yes snippet)
Set 2
10. 45:33 Part One
11. 45:33 Part Two (with Reggie Watts)
12. Sound of Silver
13. 45:33 Part Four (with The Juan MacLean)
14. 45:33 Part Five (with Shit Robot)
15. 45:33 Part Six
16. Freak Out/Starry Eyes
Set 3
17. Us v Them
18. North American Scum (with Arcade Fire)
19. Bye Bye Bayou (Alan Vega cover)
20. You Wanted A Hit
21. Tribulations
22. Movement
23. Yeah (Crass Version)
24. Someone Great
25. Losing My Edge (With "Da Funk" by Daft Punk snippet)
26. Home
Encore
27. All I Want
28. Jump Into the Fire (Harry Nilsson cover)
29. New York, I Love You But You're Bringing Me Down (with "Twin Peaks Theme" by Angelo Badalamenti intro)
Outro ("Electric Avenue" by Eddy Grant)
April 8, 2010 -- LCD Soundsystem perform a surprise "Coachella warm up" show at the Music Hall of Williamsburg in Brooklyn, New York.
© 2010 Kathryn Yu. All rights reserved.
Closeup from the TFT (thin film transistor) side.
This is a small LCD from a digital photo camera. The glass plates where separated with heat.
This is the glass plate with the transistors on them. On the other plate are the RGB filters.
Close - Up, minute 13 on the Sky News channel clock, if you have a look at the full size original you can see the LCD/LED segments that make up the picture....
Took me a while to get this working - datasheet seems wrong, or I have the wrong datasheet... either way it works now
Nuits de Fourvière 2018
12/06/2018
www.kymmo.com / kymmo ©
All rights reserved /// Photo non libre de droit. (c) Kymmo
I agreed to a create-something-handmade swap with a couple of friends on Facebook. One is an English teacher so I decided to make something I've been thinking about for a while: a small box which displays random words. I like the idea of an object that's different every time you look at it.
So I got a small 16x2 LCD and started coding and wiring my Arduino project. I liked the idea of it being standalone (run off batteries) so I added an LDR (Light Dependent Resistor) so it could go into power-saving sleep when the surroundings went dark. I found it difficult to reliably and consistently measure the changes in current draw resulting from my experiments, so I'm unsure how well that worked. And I've given them away now.
The ATmega328 has only around 32k program & memory so I needed some heroic measures to squeeze in a decent number of words. I used Huffman coding to compress a list of real words (a subset of the Grandiloquent Dictionary, used with permission). I also used Markov chains to generate (a nealy infinite?) number of random pseudo-words.
See the set.