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Sanguino is an open source Arduino-compatible microcontroller board that is based on the Arduino, and inspired by the Boarduino form-factor. It uses the atmega644P chip which has 4x the memory, ram and 12 more GPIO pins than the Arduino's atmega168.
More info: make.sanguino.cc/1.0
The Z8 was a microcontroller introduced by Zilog in 1979, competing with the Intel 8048. Note that the Z8 is entirely unrelated to the better-known Z80.
This is the side of the QUIP package that is down (toward the printed circuit board) when inserted into the socket. On each side two staggered rows of contacts are seen. The legends are printed on the kovar lid which seals the die cavity. The on-centerline oval and off-centerline round hole match plastic posts in the socket used for keying.
Note that Intel labeled their QUIP parts on the other side, along the probe contacts, so that the labeling was visible when the part was socketed.
For more info on ceramic leadless QUIP:
Just trying out the parts for size on the board. The layout is very similar, but not identical, to the Arduino PCB. I've chosen the little black tact-switch for reset, and the tiny red Wima capacitors for decoupling, but since this stage, I've decided to change the Molex KK connectors. Note the use of a socket for the crystal -- I'd like to swap it for a 12MHz one later, to run the USB software.
Intersema MS5534 temperature compensated pressure sensor, Atmel Mega32 microcontroller, DS1307 real time clock, and Lascar Electronics SP 5-GFX1 display
Together with the experience of the promoter in projects involving Government Sectors and Private Industrial Sectors,Techon Electro Controls now looks forward to participating in the International projects to carrying out Design, Manufacturing,Installation and commissioning of Small,Medium & Large Captive Power Plants as well as complete power utilization & distribution solutions.
Forum Bildung Digitalisierung e.V.
Autorin: Katja Anokhina
Lizenz: CC BY 4.0
Ort:
LEARNTEC 2018, Karlsruhe
Talks and performances by people doing strange things with electricity
Fri 23 March 2012, 6.30-10pm with interval at the Showroom Cinema, Sheffield.
Dorkbot is a meeting of people interested in electric/electronic art in the broadest sense; robotics, kinetic art, microcontrollers, interactive art, algorithmic music, net.art... The only real conditions are that it is a bit strange and involves electricity in some way. It is really defined by whoever turns up, be it engineers who want to be artists, artists who want to be engineers, or the otherwise confused.
This MEGADORK event features a cabaret of talks and performances from among the UK's dorkiest, to entertain and amaze:
Paul Granjon - A strange performance from the world renowned self-styled robot artist.
Patrick Tresset - Talks about his drawing robot Paul (on show as part of the Alan Turing: Intuition and Ingenuity exhibition).
Daniel Jones and James Bulley - talking about generating live music from patterns of weather.
www.variable4.org.uk/about/intro
Sarah and Jenny Angliss - playing robot music from past futures.
spacedog.biz
Sergi Jorda - talks about the Reactable tangible tabletop music playground (which you'll be able to try out at the Central Library Saturday 24 March)
Dan Stowell - Demonstrates his use of the Risset illusion in techno music.
Silicone Bake - Live coded pop songs about love, death and counterfeit watches, where all lyrics are taken from spam emails.
Megadork is curated by Alex McLean.
Dorkbot started in New York, spread to London, and now dozens of cities around the world, including several active UK chapters; Sheffield, Bristol, Anglia, Newcastle, Cardiff and Alba (Scotland). Find out more at: www.dorkbot.org
Lovebytes 2012 - Digital Spring
A Festival of Art, Science and Technology
22-24 March
Sheffield UK
Microchip Technology's MCP9804 Temperature Sensor provides high temperature accuracy of +0.25° C (typical) and +/- 1° C from -40 to +125°C, as well as static current consumption of just 200 µA (typ.). Available in small 8-pin MSOP and 2 mm x 3 mm DFN packages, the I2C™ device reduces board space and enables longer battery life for industrial, automotive and consumer applications.
The MC13224 from Freescale is a ZigBee System-On-Package device. The three dies pictured are the microcontroller, radio, and flash memory.
My new Arduino Diecimila board
Blog Entry:
cmpalmer.blogspot.com/2007/09/arduino-beakmans-motor-and....
Instructables
Together with the experience of the promoter in projects involving Government Sectors and Private Industrial Sectors,Techon Electro Controls now looks forward to participating in the International projects to carrying out Design, Manufacturing,Installation and commissioning of Small,Medium & Large Captive Power Plants as well as complete power utilization & distribution solutions.
A work of minimalism, this little car is put together from individual parts. I'm working to expand my knowledge of electronics and robotics by doing without the abstraction of store-bought controller boards and power supplies. I did, of course, use circuits designed by others, as I'm not that far along. The power supply, H-bridge, and IR emitter circuits came from my copy of Intermediate Robot Building by David Cook (robotroom.com).
Die shot of an 8-bit microcomputer (basically a microcontroller) from a sewing machine. Most of the program data was stored on a separate chip. The long two blocks at the right are rom too, but there’s only 8kb worth on the die.
datasheet: www.alldatasheet.com/datasheet-pdf/pdf/119045/NEC/UPD7831...
Microchip expands XLP low-power PIC® microcontroller portfolio with integrated hardware encryption engine
Complete with spelling mistake!
Finally cracked the printing of the time problem, I had to do a little (well a lot of) research into "C" programming, and eventually discovered the function "itoa" which (obviously) converts an integer to a string, which is exactly what I needed to do in order for this to work.
The inside of the body of our Axial SCX10 Dingo, showing the wiring harness of the ultra-thin enamel wire to the LEDs.
A little demo program that just shows some text, then clears the display and shows a pre-drawn bitmap. The full bit-map memory on the LCD controller is 864 bytes (96x9).
Microchip’s certified ZigBee PRO protocol stack provides yet another option for IEEE 802.15.4-based wireless networks using Microchip’s PIC MCUs. The combination of Microchip’s ZigBee PRO stack, the MRF24J40 transceiver radio or transceiver modules, and any of its 16-bit PIC24 MCUs or dsPIC33 DSCs forms Microchip’s ZigBee PRO Compliant Platform, as certified by the ZigBee Alliance.
The slave light controller is housed in a pencil sharpener case in the body of our Axial SCX10 Dingo. The tiny servo is driving the steering wheel for realism.
Note that it must be oriented properly. One of the two pieces of metal inside the LED has two little circles in it; that piece of metal should face to the right, the one without holes to the left. Make sure the legs on top are flat against the top of the wood; there will be a gap between the bottom of the wood and the legs underneath it.
Sanguino is an open source Arduino-compatible microcontroller board that is based on the Arduino, and inspired by the Boarduino form-factor. It uses the atmega644P chip which has 4x the memory, ram and 12 more GPIO pins than the Arduino's atmega168.
More info: make.sanguino.cc/1.0
Freeing the microcontroller from its Arduino shackles.
One could simply lift the micro from the Arduino board and build the key additional components required around it.
However I wanted to use a "fresh" micro, but this required the Arduino bootloader to be burned onto it in order to allow it to be programmed from the Arduino ...
It's all a bit of a faff, but that is kind of "the point" of doing it!
Yet another side project; A while back I designed PCBs for a relatively simple persistence of vision top; This is the top board, with the microcontroller and some sensors.
these boards were sent out to Laen a while back, should be coming back any day now.
Talks and performances by people doing strange things with electricity
Fri 23 March 2012, 6.30-10pm with interval at the Showroom Cinema, Sheffield.
Dorkbot is a meeting of people interested in electric/electronic art in the broadest sense; robotics, kinetic art, microcontrollers, interactive art, algorithmic music, net.art... The only real conditions are that it is a bit strange and involves electricity in some way. It is really defined by whoever turns up, be it engineers who want to be artists, artists who want to be engineers, or the otherwise confused.
This MEGADORK event features a cabaret of talks and performances from among the UK's dorkiest, to entertain and amaze:
Paul Granjon - A strange performance from the world renowned self-styled robot artist.
Patrick Tresset - Talks about his drawing robot Paul (on show as part of the Alan Turing: Intuition and Ingenuity exhibition).
Daniel Jones and James Bulley - talking about generating live music from patterns of weather.
www.variable4.org.uk/about/intro
Sarah and Jenny Angliss - playing robot music from past futures.
spacedog.biz
Sergi Jorda - talks about the Reactable tangible tabletop music playground (which you'll be able to try out at the Central Library Saturday 24 March)
Dan Stowell - Demonstrates his use of the Risset illusion in techno music.
Silicone Bake - Live coded pop songs about love, death and counterfeit watches, where all lyrics are taken from spam emails.
Megadork is curated by Alex McLean.
Dorkbot started in New York, spread to London, and now dozens of cities around the world, including several active UK chapters; Sheffield, Bristol, Anglia, Newcastle, Cardiff and Alba (Scotland). Find out more at: www.dorkbot.org
Lovebytes 2012 - Digital Spring
A Festival of Art, Science and Technology
22-24 March
Sheffield UK
Talks and performances by people doing strange things with electricity
Fri 23 March 2012, 6.30-10pm with interval at the Showroom Cinema, Sheffield.
Dorkbot is a meeting of people interested in electric/electronic art in the broadest sense; robotics, kinetic art, microcontrollers, interactive art, algorithmic music, net.art... The only real conditions are that it is a bit strange and involves electricity in some way. It is really defined by whoever turns up, be it engineers who want to be artists, artists who want to be engineers, or the otherwise confused.
This MEGADORK event features a cabaret of talks and performances from among the UK's dorkiest, to entertain and amaze:
Paul Granjon - A strange performance from the world renowned self-styled robot artist.
Patrick Tresset - Talks about his drawing robot Paul (on show as part of the Alan Turing: Intuition and Ingenuity exhibition).
Daniel Jones and James Bulley - talking about generating live music from patterns of weather.
www.variable4.org.uk/about/intro
Sarah and Jenny Angliss - playing robot music from past futures.
spacedog.biz
Sergi Jorda - talks about the Reactable tangible tabletop music playground (which you'll be able to try out at the Central Library Saturday 24 March)
Dan Stowell - Demonstrates his use of the Risset illusion in techno music.
Silicone Bake - Live coded pop songs about love, death and counterfeit watches, where all lyrics are taken from spam emails.
Megadork is curated by Alex McLean.
Dorkbot started in New York, spread to London, and now dozens of cities around the world, including several active UK chapters; Sheffield, Bristol, Anglia, Newcastle, Cardiff and Alba (Scotland). Find out more at: www.dorkbot.org
Lovebytes 2012 - Digital Spring
A Festival of Art, Science and Technology
22-24 March
Sheffield UK
Pixel VGA, version 1 (Floor Cluster) - Garnet Hertz
Two dozen old computer monitors occupy the center of a gallery floor in a cluster facing the wall. Each screen is controlled with custom electronics to create pulsating and strobing patterns, casting a colored wash across the darkened gallery.
Dimensions: Variable (approx 3m x 3m). VGA monitors, custom electronics. 2011.
More project information: conceptlab.com/pixel/
Auf diesem Foto kann man leider die Uhrzeit nicht so gut erkennen.
7-Segment-Anzeige Grove TM1637 mit Microcontroller NodeMCU LoLin V3 ESP8266. Es wird über WiFi eine Verbindung ins Internet aufbebaut und von einem NTP-Server die aktuelle Uhrzeit geholt. Danach zählt der Prozessor selbst weiter und zeigt die Uhrzeit an.
Nachdem es technisch funktioniert hat, habe ich selbst aus Klemmbausteinen ein würfel-förmiges Gehäuse gebaut.