View allAll Photos Tagged microcontroller
Turned a Rubbermaid food storage container into a case to carry my Arduino in my bag on my bicycle.
For Bread Bike Blog
From left to right: the digital radio module, voltage regulation, amp and speaker; the main microcontroller and graphics microcontroller, plus screen; the social module microcontroller with wifi module. The test rig is visible in the top right. Barely any of these components are final.
Foto von Jan Kraus
An unserem Code&Play Stand konnte an drei Tagen ein buntes Workshop-Angebot wahrgenommen werden. Mit dabei waren:
senseBox, Junge Tüftler, NaWiTex-Schülerlabor, Technologiestiftung Berlin, Open Knowledge Foundation, Infosphere Aachen, Coder Dojos, Creative Gaming und das Game Science Center!
This is a Teleo object that I am using to interface with the Pepsi Machine Project. Ernesto Arroyo is graciously helping me figure things out.
Back to c0nn0r.info/blog.
My standard LED status indicator for the Jeenode. More details at www.ka1kjz.com/787/a-standard-led-indicator-for-jeenodes/
Turned a Rubbermaid food storage container into a case to carry my Arduino in my bag on my bicycle.
For Bread Bike Blog
On mbed.org/ rapid prototyping board with Lilypad Arduino buzzer making a guest appearance w crocodile clips & breadboard.
I picked up an evaluation board for Atmel's new AVR32 line of microcontrollers. It has pretty good processing horsepower, low power consumption, tons of peripherals and drivers, plus an onboard audio DAC (too bad the engineering sample revision of the silicon I got has a non-working audio DAC). Also a nice optimized DSP library. Perfect for homebrew synthesis.
The top signal shows the premature death of the ATtiny24's TIM1_COMPA_vect. In hindsight the explanation is trivial, but I didn't suspect that cause until very late in the debugging process - as usual.
Range box up and running with continuity display. Bottom line scrolls information about the range box
VALVANO, Jonathan W.. Embedded systems: volume 3: real-time operating systems for the ARM® CORTEX(TM)-M microcontrollers. 3 ed. Atascadero: CA CreateSpace, 2014. v. 3. xii, 435 p. ISBN 1466468866. Inclui bibliografia e Ãndice; il. tab. quad.; 24x16cm.
Palavras-chave: SISTEMAS INFORMATICOS INCORPORADOS; MICROPROCESSADORES; INTERFACES DE COMPUTADORES.
CDU 004.38 / V215i / v. 3 / 3 ed. / 2014
The chipKIT™ Max32 is a prototyping platform that adds the performance of the Microchip® PIC32 microcontroller. The Max32 features a USB serial port interface for connection to the IDE and can be powered via USB or an external power supply.
The Max32 board takes advantage of the powerful PIC32MX795F512 microcontroller, which features a 32-bit MIPS processor core running at 80 MHz, 512K of flash program memory and 128K of SRAM data memory. In addition, the processor provides a USB 2 OTG controller, 10/100 Ethernet MAC and dual CAN controllers that can be accessed via add-on I/O shields.
store.digilentinc.com/chipkit-max32-microcontroller-board...
Just received an ITeaduino from ITead Studios in China. It's a clone of the Arduino, with a few enhancements like a simple selector to run on 3.3V and three pin connectors with power for inputs and outputs.
Comes in a pretty nice box too.
A motor driver shield for the Arduino using the ULN2065B, a quad darlington switch chip rated at 1.5A. http://jarkman.co.uk/catalog/fripperies/compasshat.htm
Students learn the basics of programming microcontrollers using the Inventor Kits available in the Innovation Lab.
Using over 30 batteries, 80 LEDs, 4 microcontrollers and one embedded computer, volunteers and staff in the Jocelyn H. Lee Innovation Lab prepared an attention-grabbing presentation for the 2016 Texas Library Association Poster Session. The poster presented various ways to use LEDs in maker projects, had embedded QR codes for viewers to access additional information on each topic, and was even interactive - participants could change LED colors by sending appropriate Tweets,
Thank you everyone who helped make this presentation a success.