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Sanguino is an open source Arduino-compatible microcontroller board that is base

 

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

 

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 MPLAB® ICD 3 is a cost-effective, high-speed in-circuit programmer and debugger for Microchip’s Flash-based 8-bit PIC® microcontrollers (MCUs), and its entire line of 16- and 32-bit MCUs and 16-bit dsPIC® Digital Signal Controllers (DSCs). Please visit www.microchip.com/ICD3 for more information.

The PIC32 USB Starter Kit II (part # DM320003-2, $55) is an upgrade of Microchip’s existing USB starter kit for Microchip's three new PIC32MX5/6/7 families of 32-bit microcontrollers. For more info visit www.microchip.com/PIC32.

How to make a single-sided circuit board. Read more about this project here.

How to make a single-sided circuit board. Read more about this project here.

Motorcycle gear shift indicator

Receiver showing signs of life in its new "Arduino-free" environment.

 

Note that I'm using a different LCD panel as I was experiencing some difficulties with the original one.

 

No evidence of any power rail decoupling there - however I seem to have got away with it.

 

The yellow wire disappearing off to the top left is the data line from the out-of-shot MSF receiver.

 

The LED is "repeating" the data signal as a confidence check that valid data is (probably) being received even before the software has made sense of it.

 

The LED being ON corresponds to the RF carrier from MSF being OFF.

 

The final project will hopefully be slightly better engineered!

8-Bit microcontroller with EEPROM

Microchip Technology Inc., a leading provider of microcontroller, analog and Flash-IP solutions, today announced the expansion of its RF power amplifier portfolio, with the addition of the new SST12LP17E and SST12LP18E devices. The SST12LP18E is a lower-cost, lower-voltage alternative to Microchip’s popular SST12LP14E power amp.

The finished LED daughter board. The left-hand end of the header plug has been cut off so that it'll fit the DIN 41612 connector on the AVR motherboard.

 

Microchip Technology Inc., a leading provider of microcontroller, analog and Flash-IP solutions, today announced the expansion of its RF power amplifier portfolio, with the addition of the new SST12LP17E and SST12LP18E devices. The SST12LP18E is a lower-cost, lower-voltage alternative to Microchip’s popular SST12LP14E power amp.

The rectangle in the middle is 18x64 pixels.

Version 1.1 of our open source 'tiny2313 breakout board. Read more here.

The PIC16F1934/6/7 are the first microcontrollers featuring Microchip Technology's enhanced Mid-range 8-bit core.

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.

www.zprod.org/

 

Patrick Tresset - Talks about his drawing robot Paul (on show as part of the Alan Turing: Intuition and Ingenuity exhibition).

www.aikon-gold.com/

 

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)

www.reactable.com/

 

Dan Stowell - Demonstrates his use of the Risset illusion in techno music.

www.mcld.co.uk/

 

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

 

www.lovebytes.org.uk

Infineon XMC 2Go

 

KIT_XMC_2GO_XMC1100_V1

 

Summary of Features:

XMC1100 (ARM® Cortex™-M0 based)

On-board J-Link Lite Debugger

(Realized with XMC4200 Microcontroller)

Power over USB (Micro USB)

ESD and reverse current protection

2 x user LED

Pin Header 2x8 Pins suitable for Breadbord

Having found that the ATtiny85 didn't have enough memory to hold my brainwave visualisations code, I put together a little Shrimp circuit to hook up the LED matrix and Bluetooth dongle. Attention data levels is visualised as red LEDs and meditation data levels as green LEDs.

Testing out an ADXL335 accelerometer, and interfacing it to an AVR microcontroller. Read more here

Lissajous figures are interesting curves that occur in systems where oscillation happens in more than one direction, for example when a pendulum hanging from a string moves in the plane.

 

These pictures are from an easy persistence of vision approach to playing with Lissajous figures. Read more about this project here.

  

Closeup of the power connections.

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/

2005-2010

 

Found plastic flowers, foam, light sensors, mp3 players, microcontroller, speakers, birdsong

 

An ersatz version of nature; beautiful, yet a little bit deadly when one considers the natural resources required to create such impeccable imitations of vegetation. Is it also a reflection of human hubris... what else motivates the manufacturing of fake flowers? Why replace the ephemeral with plastic permanence? What joy is there in a whiff of a petroleum-based bouquet rather than the delicate scent of a rose? Secret Garden offers an opportunity to contemplate these questions at the same time it tries to seduce you with extravagant color and joyous birdsong performed just for you.

 

Ann Resnick, Tom McGuire, John Harrison

$15,000

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.

www.zprod.org/

 

Patrick Tresset - Talks about his drawing robot Paul (on show as part of the Alan Turing: Intuition and Ingenuity exhibition).

www.aikon-gold.com/

 

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)

www.reactable.com/

 

Dan Stowell - Demonstrates his use of the Risset illusion in techno music.

www.mcld.co.uk/

 

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

 

www.lovebytes.org.uk

CNC USB Controller - JCNC

more Information: www.jtronics.de

Saturday SMD help alden out of a time bind party.

We all hung out and did about 30 boards with 30 smd 603 LED's on the board. Very cool stuff. We made a Chinese electronics sweat shop in an Arlington workshop basement.

 

If you didnt come you missed out!

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.

www.zprod.org/

 

Patrick Tresset - Talks about his drawing robot Paul (on show as part of the Alan Turing: Intuition and Ingenuity exhibition).

www.aikon-gold.com/

 

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)

www.reactable.com/

 

Dan Stowell - Demonstrates his use of the Risset illusion in techno music.

www.mcld.co.uk/

 

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

 

www.lovebytes.org.uk

Microchip Technology achieved certification for its ZigBee® RF4CE Compliant Platform, which enables the next generation of RF remote controls and consumer electronics. The platform consists of Microchip’s nanoWatt XLP eXtreme Low Power PIC® microcontrollers, the MRF24J40 IEEE 802.15.4 transceivers and FCC-certified modules, and the industry’s smallest memory footprint ZigBee RF4CE certified protocol stack. For more information visit: www.microchip.com/RF4CE

How to make a single-sided circuit board. Read more about this project here.

The top view of the PCB of the light controller unit. On the left are the 3 channel inputs to the receiver and the output to the slave unit, then vertically with the sticker is the PIC 16F628A microcontroller. On the right top is the TI TLC5916 constant current LED driver and on the right bottom is the Boost Regulator that converts the 5V to 7.5V to drive high brightness LEDs.

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.

www.zprod.org/

 

Patrick Tresset - Talks about his drawing robot Paul (on show as part of the Alan Turing: Intuition and Ingenuity exhibition).

www.aikon-gold.com/

 

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)

www.reactable.com/

 

Dan Stowell - Demonstrates his use of the Risset illusion in techno music.

www.mcld.co.uk/

 

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

 

www.lovebytes.org.uk

8-Bit microcontroller with EEPROM

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

 

Infineon XMC 2Go

 

KIT_XMC_2GO_XMC1100_V1

 

Summary of Features:

XMC1100 (ARM® Cortex™-M0 based)

On-board J-Link Lite Debugger

(Realized with XMC4200 Microcontroller)

Power over USB (Micro USB)

ESD and reverse current protection

2 x user LED

Pin Header 2x8 Pins suitable for Breadbord

The motor driver is a simple Darlington pair comprising as BFY51 and a BDY20. Photo by David Henshall.

Connection with L293d Motor Driver IC with microcontroller.

The Arduino microcontroller board is wired up to a Nokia 1202 LCD via a CD4050 buffer chip. The bit-maps of the cells in the game take up nearly all the RAM on the AVR microcontroller chip. New generations are displayed at a rate of about ten per second. Screen resolution is 96x68 pixels.

How to make a single-sided circuit board. Read more about this project here.

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