Archive for the ‘arduino’ Category
Friday, August 27th, 2010
Limor Fried’s MintyBoost project is a great example of DIY and commercial tech working together. Take an Altoids tin, a couple of AA batteries, and some very smart hackery, and you’ve got a lightweight USB charger that you can use to charge/run your handheld iWhatever, or almost any other phone, camera, or small device that can take a charge off USB power. About a month ago, she released this video outlining the Apple hackery needed to make this work. Reverse engineering Apple’s secret charging methods from adafruit industries on Vimeo . Clive Thompson profiled Fried and her company Adafruit Industries as part of a 2008 feature in Wired on “ open source hardware .” The idea is that hackers like Fried can use what they find out about consumer devices to make and sell their own products, but also to produce DIY kits and share information with others who then build their own projects. As a case study in the value of sharing this information, consider Rob Scott. Before he took his son on a week-long bike trip this summer, he used Fried’s schematic to hack together what turns out to be a really striking-looking solar charger for his son’s iPod . It’s always nice to see what the maker community is doing to accessorize their retail gadgets; the results aren’t always super-polished, but they generally solve real problems in important use cases that don’t get addressed by manufacturers, either because they’re too unusual or they can’t be easily solved by more plugs, more peripherals, more complex devices that cost a lot of money. And in turn, we all find out a little bit more about how these magical devices get put together and how they work. See Also: DIY Graphing Calculator Is Built From Open Source Hardware
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DIY Friday: Charge Your iPhone With AAs or Solar Power
Tags: altoids, arduino, charge, community, fried, ice, led, lit, maker, pad, ring, summer
Posted in -1, 16, 20, 21, 4, 53, 8, AR, Adafruit, DED, EA, Hacks, Mods and DIY, IM, IR, Kin, Limor Fried, Mac, OS, One, RC, RIP, Red, Rob, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, a, ad, altoids, amp, apple, arduino, art, ati, bat, batteries, bike, blog, build, by, c, calculator, cam, camera, canon, case, cases, ces, charge, charger, charging, cia, commercial, community, company, con, consumer, cost, couple, detail, device, devices, dg, diy, dre, dress, ds, engine, engineer, engineering, era, ever, ex, f, feature, file, for, form, full, gadget, gadgets, gen, go, got, gt, hack, hacker, hackers, hackery, hacks, hand, hard, hardware, hat, hi, iPhone Hacks, ic, ice, in, information, inside, ipad, iphone, ipod, is, it, kit, l, lady, led, lens, light, lightweight, lit, live, long, m, ma, macro, magazine, magic, make, maker, mall, man, me, met, mifi, money, more, no, not, ny, o, of, ons, open, open source hardware, other, pad, part, pen, peripherals, phone, plugs, polish, power, pr, pro, problem, problems, produce, product, profile, project, q, r, real, really, retail, reverse, ring, roc, rom, run, scott, secret, sharing, side, sm, smart, solar, son, source, star, startup, startups, stuffs, summer, tan, tech, that, the, this, ti, to, tp, trip, turin, uni, up, usb, value, video, war, week, weight, wire, wired.com, with, work, working, www, yo, you, your | No Comments »
Thursday, August 19th, 2010
Gardening is about getting your hands dirty and back in touch with nature. But if you are a geek like Andrew Frueh, a graphic designer who lives in Philadelphia, the hobby can take on a high-tech twist. For less than $200, Frueh has created a garden automation system called GardenBot that uses open source hardware (such as the Arduino) to monitor humidity, temperature and soil conditions. The data is then poured into charts so you can view the world as the plants see it, he says. “It’s not terribly complicated,” says Frueh, who has put the system into his 120-square-foot backyard garden that has about 20 tomato plants, collard greens, kale and peppers. “The biggest hurdles would be understanding Arduino and having some soldering experience.” High-tech farming using soil sensors and intelligent management of water resources has been growing among professional farmers. For home gardeners, there are products such as the $50 EasyBloom Plant Sensor that will measure sunlight, temperature, water drainage and fertilizer. But some of those features require subscription, and users can’t hack or tweak it. Chart shows the conditions in Andrew Freuh's garden over three days. The GardenBot’s brain is the Arduino board . The rest of the system has a garden station, which is a junction box for all the sensors and a place to secure the wiring. The key modules for the system are soil moisture sensor, soil temperature sensor, light level and water value. Each of these modules can be built separately and integrated into GardenBot. Once GardenBot is live, it can send data to a computer so that the information is plotted on a chart and updated every 15 minutes. Frueh decided to use open source hardware because he was excited by the Arduino microcontroller and the potential to build a system that would be based on modules. GardenBot has made his gardening experience better and easier, says Frueh. “We ended up using much less water this year, which was nice,” he says. “It changed how I was thinking about watering the plants.” Frueh’s GardenBot has been running for about two months with no downtime. If you would like to build the GardenBot yourself, check out Freuh’s well illustrated and step-by-step instructions on his website. See Also: NASA Scientists Suggest Planting a Lunar Garden Geek Gardening: A Wired Guide to Domestic Terraforming Passing it On: Sharing Geeky Gardening With Your Children Clive Thompson on Why Urban Farming Isn’t Just for Foodies Photos: Andrew Frueh

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GardenBot Brings Geek Power to Green Thumbs
Posted in -1, 120, 14, 16, 20, 2009, 21, 300, 4, 50, 60, 64, 8, AR, AVI, Andrew Frueh, Content, DED, EA, Gardenbot, Hacks, Mods and DIY, Uncategorized, a, ad, ads, age, amp, ana, arduino, arm, art, arts, ati, auto, automation, back, backyard, biggest, blog, blogs, box, brain, build, by, c, call, cat, ces, change, charts, children, computer, con, control, controller, data, day, days, design, dg, dirt, dre, ds, end, era, eu, ever, every, ex, f, feature, features, food, for, form, gadget, gadgets, garden, gardeners, gardening, geek, gen, green, gt, gui, guide, hack, hand, hands, hard, hardware, hat, hi, high, home, hose, howto, open source hardware | No Comments »
Thursday, August 19th, 2010
Gardening is about getting your hands dirty and back in touch with nature. But if you are a geek like Andrew Frueh, a graphic designer who lives in Philadelphia, the hobby can take on a high-tech twist. For less than $200, Frueh has created a garden automation system called GardenBot that uses open source hardware (such as the Arduino) to monitor humidity, temperature and soil conditions. The data is then poured into charts so you can view the world as the plants see it, he says. “It’s not terribly complicated,” says Frueh, who has put the system into his 120-square-foot backyard garden that has about 20 tomato plants, collard greens, kale and peppers. “The biggest hurdles would be understanding Arduino and having some soldering experience.” High-tech farming using soil sensors and intelligent management of water resources has been growing among professional farmers. For home gardeners, there are products such as the $50 EasyBloom Plant Sensor that will measure sunlight, temperature, water drainage and fertilizer. But some of those features require subscription, and users can’t hack or tweak it. Chart shows the conditions in Andrew Freuh's garden over three days. The GardenBot’s brain is the Arduino board . The rest of the system has a garden station, which is a junction box for all the sensors and a place to secure the wiring. The key modules for the system are soil moisture sensor, soil temperature sensor, light level and water value. Each of these modules can be built separately and integrated into GardenBot. Once GardenBot is live, it can send data to a computer so that the information is plotted on a chart and updated every 15 minutes. Frueh decided to use open source hardware because he was excited by the Arduino microcontroller and the potential to build a system that would be based on modules. GardenBot has made his gardening experience better and easier, says Frueh. “We ended up using much less water this year, which was nice,” he says. “It changed how I was thinking about watering the plants.” Frueh’s GardenBot has been running for about two months with no downtime. If you would like to build the GardenBot yourself, check out Freuh’s well illustrated and step-by-step instructions on his website. See Also: NASA Scientists Suggest Planting a Lunar Garden Geek Gardening: A Wired Guide to Domestic Terraforming Passing it On: Sharing Geeky Gardening With Your Children Clive Thompson on Why Urban Farming Isn’t Just for Foodies Photos: Andrew Frueh

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GardenBot Brings Geek Power to Green Thumbs
Tags: andrew-frueh, arduino, ever, for, home, hose, key, mod, open source hardware, place, pro, product, self, sunlight
Posted in Andrew Frueh, Gardenbot, Hacks, Mods and DIY, Uncategorized, arduino, garden, gardening | No Comments »
Friday, August 6th, 2010
Mirror, mirror, on the wall — who’s the geekiest one of all? Magic mirrors may be the stuff of fairy tales, but Al Linke used his Arduino coding skills, soldering skills, and software development skills to craft an interactive “magic mirror” for his daughter’s playhouse. Not content with making it dispense fortunes, Linke also gave it the ability to forecast the weather (via weather reports online), tell you how your stock portfolio is doing, turn the lights on and off, and even tell you whether you’ve had too much to drink, using a small breathalyzer module. Those capabilities are more useful for grown-up parties than the playhouse, we’d say. If you want to make one of your own, Linke has posted instructions on how to build a DIY Magic Mirror on Instructables. You can even buy a Magic Mirror kit (breathalyzer included). For more information, check out Linke’s DIY Magic Mirror site. Video produced by Annaliza Savage / Wired.com.

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Video: DIY Magic Mirror Predicts the Future, Checks Your Blood Alcohol Level
Tags: compact, drink, era, gadget, gadgets, gave-it-the, may, not, parties, reports-online, sold, tie
Posted in 20, 21, 50, 7D, 8, AR, Breathalyzer, Content, DED, EA, Hacks, Mods and DIY, IM, IR, Kin, Modu, Ntera, OS, One, RC, Red, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, a, ad, ads, age, air, amp, api, arduino, art, ati, breath, bright, build, button, by, c, cap, coding, compact, con, craft, development, dg, diy, drink, ds, end, era, f, fair, for, form, fort, ft, gadget, gadgets, geek, hi, hose, house, how to, htc, ic, ice, image, in, information, instructions, interactive, is, isp, it, kit, lay, light, lights, line, link, lit, m, ma, magic, magic mirror, make, maker, makers, mall, market, may, me, men, mirror, mod, nc, nes, no, not, o, of, old, older, online, ons, part, parties, pen, player, pos, pr, pro, produce, product, q, r, rig, ring, sa, sensors, service, site, sm, soft, software, sold, soldering, source, sp, stock, table, tables, the, ti, tie, to, tp, tweet, up, video, wall, war, weather, wire, wired.com, with, www, yo, you, your | No Comments »
Friday, July 30th, 2010
Someday humans and computers will meld together to create cyborgs. But instead of waiting for it, Martin Magnusson, a Swedish researcher and entrepreneur, has taken the first step and created a wearable computer that can be slung across the body. Magnusson has hacked a pair of head-mounted display glasses and combined it with a homebrewed machine based on a open source Beagleboard single computer. Packed into a CD case and slung across the shoulder messenger-bag style, he is ready to roll. A computer is a window to the virtual world, says Magnusson. “But as soon as I get up and about, that window closes and I’m stuck within the limits of physical reality,” he says. “Wearable computers make it possible to keep the window open. All the time.” Magnusson’s idea is interesting though one step short of integrating a machine inside the body. In 2008, a Canadian film maker Rob Spence decided to embed a tiny video camera into his prosthetic left eye. Spence who is still working on the project hopes to someday record everything around him as he sees it and lifecast it. For his wearable computer , Magnusson is using a pair of Myvu glasses that slide on like a pair of sunglasses but have a tiny video screen built into the lens. A Beagleboard running Angstrom Linux and a Plexgear mini USB hub that drives the Bluetooth adapter and display forms the rest of this rather simple machine. Four 2700 mAh AA batteries are used to power the USB hub. Magnusson has used a foldable Nokia keyboard for input and is piping internet connectivity through Bluetooth tethering to an iPhone in his pocket. Magnusson says he wants to use the wearable computer to “augment” his memory. “By having my to-do list in the corner of my eye, I always remember the details of my schedule,” he says. Check out photos of his gear: The innards of the homebrewed machine are glued to a CD case. The CD case is slung across the shoulder by attaching it to a strap using velcro. What the homebrewed computer looks like: See Also: BeagleBoard Gives New Power to Open Source Gadgets Why Arduino Is a Hit With Hardware Hackers Tech Specs: Less Geek, More Chic Wired 11.04: Wrist-Top Revolution Photos: Susanna Nilsson

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DIY Wearable Computer Turns You Into a Cyborg
Tags: beagleboard, gadgets, glasses, machine, myvu, nec, One, screen, shoulder, tethering, work
Posted in 20, 21, 4, 50, 5d, 60, 63, 64, 73, 7D, 8, 87, AR, Beagleboard, Content, DED, EA, Gear, Hacked, Hacks, Mods and DIY, IM, IR, Kin, MIT, MITS, Mac, Magnusson, Miscellaneous, MyVu, Nokia, OS, One, RC, Red, Rob, SIM, Tron, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, a, ad, adapter, ads, age, air, amp, ana, api, arc, arduino, art, ati, bag, bat, batteries, bed, bin, blog, blogs, blue, bluetooth, body, borg, brew, button, by, c, cam, camera, case, cd, cell, chic, close, compact, computer, computers, computing, con, connect, connectivity, cyborg, dab, day, detail, dg, display, diy, drive, ds, entrepreneur, era, eu, ever, every, evo, evolution, ex, f, film, first, for, form, four, ft, full, gadget, gadgets, geek, glass, glasses, gm, gnu, hack, hacker, hackers, hard, hardware, hat, head, hi, home, human, humans, ic, ice, ign, image, images, in, inside, interes, interesting, internet, iphone, is, isp, it, ken, key, keyboard, las, lay, lens, life, linux, lit, m, ma, machine, make, maker, man, marti, martin, me, memory, men, mini, nc, nec, new, no, none, ny, o, of, old, open, pack, pen, phone, photo, photos, pocket, pos, power, pr, pro, project, prosthetic, q, r, real, reality, record, research, ring, rom, run, running, sa, screen, sea, search, service, side, simple, slide, son, source, sp, spy, still, strap, sun, sunglasses, tech, tethering, the, thin, this, ti, tim, time, tiny, to, top, tp, tweet, up, usa, usb, video, virtual, war, wear, wearable, wind, window, wire, wired.com, with, work, working, world, wrist, www, x4 | No Comments »
Thursday, July 29th, 2010
Google’s Nexus One phone is going where few smartphones have gone before. A group strapped the Nexus One to the back of a rocket and launched it from the Nevada desert into the atmosphere to test the device’s performance up in the air. The Mavericks Civilian Space Foundation , a group of rocket enthusiasts, used an Intimidator-5 rocket to send the device 28,000 feet into the atmosphere. “The purpose of flying the Nexus One is to find a low-cost satellite solution,” says Thomas Atchison, chairman of the Mavericks Foundation. “The radio, processing power, sensors and cameras in smartphones potentially have the same capability as those in satellites.” The idea is to drive down satellite cost by using off-the-shelf products and components, says Atchison. “Today’s satellites are the size of Greyhound buses,” he says. “But I believe they are going to get smaller and more frequently deployed. This is a first-step effort.” The Nexus One piggybacked on a rocket that’s being used as part of a project called Clotho that’s trying to find out how far off the earth’s surface life exists. The test flight with the Nexus One was to see how the device behaves under a high-G environment, says Atchison. “If you put a Nexus One in orbit, how will it perform?” he says. “How does the device handle the thermal temperature and vibrations. We wanted to see the results.” The resulting video from the Nexus One is below. As expected, the video is a lot of shaking, blue sky and blobs of light, but it is still fun to watch. An earlier test brought Nexus One back with a shattered screen but the device did well on its second flight. James Dougherty, one of the participants in the project, shows the payload with a biosampling module and the Google phone. See Also: Extreme Hobbyists Put Satellites Into Orbit With $8000 Kits … The $150 Edge-of-Space Camera: MIT Students Beat NASA On Beer … DIY Freaks Flock to ‘Hacker Spaces’ Worldwide Water-Cooled Supercomputer Doubles as Dorm Space Heater Photo: The shattered Nexus One post launch ( jurvetson/Flickr ) [via Make and Droid Ninja ]

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Nexus One Phone Rides a Rocket Up 28,000 Feet
Tags: cool, device, end, fort, kit, NASA, OLED, One, service
Posted in -1, 16, 20, 2009, 21, 28, 4, 50, 60, 73, 7D, 8, A4, AR, Cameras, Content, EA, Edge, HP, Hacks, Mods and DIY, IM, IR, ISO, Kin, MIT, Modu, NASA, Nexus, OLED, OS, One, Que, RC, RF, Red, Shows, Tron, Tubesat, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, a, ad, ads, age, air, amateur, amp, android, api, arc, arduino, art, ati, atmosphere, back, beer, blog, blogs, blue, button, by, c, call, cam, camera, cap, ces, compact, components, computer, con, cool, cost, day, desert, device, dg, diy, drive, droid, ds, end, environment, era, erick, ex, extreme, f, face, feet, first, flickr, flight, flo, fly, flying, for, form, fort, full, fun, gadget, gadgets, go, google, hack, hacker, hackers, hair, hand, handle, hat, hi, high, hose, ic, ice, ign, image, images, in, ios, iron, is, it, james, kit, las, launch, led, life, light, lit, low, low-cost, m, ma, make, mall, man, me, men, mid, mod, money, nc, nes, nevada, nex, nexus-one-, no, none, o, of, ons, orbit, pace, part, performance, person, personal, phone, phones, photo, photos, php, pos, power, pr, pro, product, project, pur, purpose, q, r, rad, radio, rick, roc, rocket, rom, sa, same, sampling, satellite, screen, second, sensor, sensors, service, show, sky, sm, smartphone, smartphones, son, source, sp, space, still, strap, student, students, surf, surface, test, the, thermal, this, ti, tim, to, tp, try, tweet, up, us-, video, watch, water, wide, wire, wired.com, with, world, www, yo, you | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 7th, 2010
Oh man! If I had a pair of those great Nike Hyperdunk 2015 sneakers (aka. The Official Shoes of Gadget Lab, aka. Marty McFly’s self-lacing shoes from Back to the Future 2 and 3), then I’d be hacking them with this amazing lace-tying mod on Instructables. The project, by Blake Bevin, uses an Arduino-controlled sensor to detect when you put your foot into the sneaker. Then, it fires a motor which tensions the laces. That’s it, although because of time and money constraints Bevin only modified one shoe. In addition to the essential parts, Bevin also added some electronic “bells and whistles” in the form of redundant circuit-boards and LEDs. The project, which you can follow step-by-step, is rather complex, but if you are an experienced Arduino hacker, then probably the hardest part is finding sneakers with enough 1980s style-cues to be worthy of the job. In practical terms, though, you’d probably want to stick with your fingers, as the whole array adds a startling amount of bulky circuitry to the heel. Also, if you’re planning a trip, either pack these in your hold baggage or just jump in the DeLorean. Power Laces- the Auto lacing shoe [Instructables via Gear Fuse ] See Also: Gallery: Hands-On With Nike's Hyperdunk 2015s Nike Hyperdunks Make Disappointing Debut, Still No McFly McFly 2015s Patented by Nike The Real 2015 McFly Shoe from Back to the Future Appears on eBay …

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Back to the Future: Hacker Makes Self-Lacing Sneakers
Tags: button, hack, hacker, low, pack, part, rain, reality, some-electronic, wired.com
Posted in 007, 1980s, 20, 21, 300, 360, 4, 50, 7D, 8, 80s, AR, Apparel, CF, Content, DED, EA, Fingers, Gear, Hacking, IM, IR, Jump, Kin, LEDs, OS, One, RC, RIP, Red, Rob, Tron, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, a, ad, ads, age, air, amazing, amp, api, arduino, art, back, back to the future, bag, blog, blogs, boards, button, by, c, ces, cia, compact, con, control, debut, dg, ds, ebay, electronic, ex, f, finding, fire, fly, for, form, future, gadget, gadgets, gallery, gb, hack, hacker, hand, hands, hands-on, hard, hat, hi, hose, hype, hyper, ic, ice, ign, image, images, in, is, it, job, las, led, lit, low, m, ma, make, man, me, mod, modified, money, moto, nike, no, o, of, old, ons, pack, part, parts, patent, plan, planning, power, pr, pro, project, q, r, rain, ray, real, reality, rig, rom, sa, self, sensor, service, shoes, sneaker, sneakers, source, stick, still, table, tables, the, the-future, this, ti, tim, time, to, train, trip, try, tweet, up, wire, wired.com, with, worth, www, yo, you, your | No Comments »
Tuesday, July 6th, 2010
For electronics hobbyists, the open source chipset BeagleBoard that packs as much punch as a smartphone processor might seem like the key to paradise. Yet it is the relatively underpowered 8-bit microcontroller Arduino that has captured the attention of DIYers. Arduino began as a project in Italy in 2005 and since then has turned into an open source hardware movement . There are thousands of Arduino projects today such as electric meters, guitar amplifiers and Arduino-based gadgets that can tell you when your plants need water. The Arduino community is at least 100,000 users strong. But it is not alone. Other open source projects like the BeagleBoard, which is shepherded by Texas Instruments, are trying to win Arduino fans over. The Beagleboard is a low-power, single-board computer, whose latest version is based on the same 1-GHz ARM Cortex A8 processor that drives the most sophisticated smartphones today. That gives it far more processing power than the Arduino. Yet the BeagleBoard hasn’t hit the same kind of chord with hardware hackers that the Arduino has. “The BeagleBoard is not for a novice,” says Phil Torrone, senior editor at Make magazine and creative director at Adafruit, a company that sells DIY electronics and kits. “With an Arduino, you can get an LED light blinking in minutes.” Fundamentally, BeagleBoard and Arduino are two different systems: The former is a single-board computer, while the Arduino is just an 8-bit microcontroller. The BeagleBoard-xM includes a 1-GHz processor, on-board ethernet, five USB 2.0 ports and 512 MB of memory. What they do have in common is that both represent possibilities: the potential to use your technical and creative skills to make a concept come alive. Here are five reasons why the Arduino is more popular than the BeagleBoard: Starter Projects Editing and rewriting is often easier than writing from scratch. It’s the same with electronics. It’s easier to mod an idea than start with a blank slate. That’s where the BeagleBoard falls short. “It has virtually no example application that you can just copy and hack to learn from,” says Massimo Banzi, one of the co-founders of the Arduino project. The Arduino has hundreds of projects and ideas that are cooked up and shared by its users. For instance, check out this list of 40 Arduino projects that includes ideas such as a Wiimote-controlled Espresso machine , a biking jacket that flashes a turn signal and a wireless electricity monitor that tweets your power usage. It’s a chicken-and-egg problem for the BeagleBoard. Unless there are more example codes out there, it is difficult to draw in the audience. And without the audience it is challenging to get enough sample projects into the community. Cost and Durability At $30 a piece, an Arduino is an inexpensive investment for someone who wants to try it out. “It’s the price of a few sandwiches,” says Torrone. Compare that to the BeagleBoard-xM, which costs $180. One reason why the Arduino is so cheap is because it is easy to clone. The microcontroller is completely open source so the “components are all commodity,” says Torrone. With the BeagleBoard, hobbyists don’t have the same amount of freedom. They have to work closely with Texas Instruments or its partners, says Torrone. Arduino is also very resilient. Drop it, smash it and it still stays alive. Add to that its low-power requirement, and the product becomes a must-have for DIYers. An Arduino can run on a 9V-battery for days. “The BeagleBoard is fast and powerful but that also means lots of energy is needed, which makes it difficult for simple projects,” says Torrone. A Thriving Community Arduino’s popularity means it’s easy to get started. Companies such as Adafruit, SparkFun and Liquidware not only sell chips, but they also host blogs that suggest ideas on how to use your Arduino while providing extensive project plans to guide you in completing your creations. Will Chellman, a student who has played with Arduino for years, says he’s now experimenting with the BeagleBoard. But finding documentation and information to work off is not easy, he says. The lack of well-documented projects done with the BeagleBoard can be intimidating to new users as well, says Banzi. “There’s lots of of interesting stuff (about the BeagleBoard) but it is very technical,” he wrote in a comment recently on Gadget Lab in response to the launch of BeagleBoard-xM. Banzi says BeagleBoard documentation is also scattered and fragmented. “Parts of it have aged and you spend quite a bit of time jumping from wikis to mailing list to track which specific bit of documentation applies to your board, bootloader etc.,” he says. Maturity Is the Key Arduino has had a head start on the BeagleBoard. By October 2008, about 50,000 Arduino boards had already been shipped. That year, the first BeagleBoards started making their way into the hands of hardware enthusiasts. “The BeagleBoard is just two years old. Since it hasn’t been around long enough, there’s not enough people building apps based on it,” says Chellman. That’s not to say that BeagleBoard isn’t catching up. Earlier this month, we showed five projects ranging from a videowall to the iPad of ham radios that use the BeagleBoard. There’s also a build-your-own tablet kit that is based off the BeagleBoard. If DIYers take a shine to it, expect to see more ideas like these. Simple Is Attractive With its single-board computer configuration, 1-GHz processing power and the choice of accessories, the BeagleBoard is a creative engineer’s dream come true. But the same reasons make it intimidating to those who want to geek out on a DIY project but don’t have the technical know-how. Arduino users point out that it is simple to connect external sensors to the board, and the example codes out there make it easy to get started quickly. Arduino is a simple system designed for creative people with little or “no prior knowledge of electronics,” says Banzi. “It’s cheap and open source with lots of documentation written in a not too technical language. Above all, it has a very welcoming attitude towards beginners and tries not to scare them too much.” Photo: pt /Flickr See Also: BeagleBoard Gives New Power to Open Source Gadgets Build Your Own Tablet for $400 Build It. Share It. Profit. Can Open Source Hardware Work? DIYers Get a Treat With Top 40 Arduino Projects Android Phone Grows Up, Becomes Brain for Real Robot

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Why Arduino Is a Hit With Hardware Hackers
Tags: codes, concept, drive, experiment, form, plants, Red, same, tan, two
Posted in -1, 100, 16, 20, 2009, 21, 3D, 4, 50, 63, 64, 7D, 8, 8-bit, 89, AR, Banzi, Beagleboard, Content, DED, EA, Edge, Hacks, Mods and DIY, IM, IR, Jump, Kin, Liquidware, Mac, Massimo, OS, One, Ovi, RC, Red, Rob, SIM, Tron, UI, Uncategorized, W, Wired, a, accessories, ad, ads, age, allen, amp, amplifiers, android, api, application, apps, arc, arduino, arm, art, arte, ati, audi, battery, blog, blogs, blogspot, boards, brain, build, building, button, by, c, cap, car, cat, ces, cheap, chic, chip, chips, city, clone, codes, community, compact, company, components, computer, con, concept, connect, control, cost, creative, cult, day, days, design, dg, diy, doc, dre, drive, droid, ds, east, edit, editing, electric, electricity, electronic, electronics, end, engine, engineer, eon, ethernet, ex, experiment, f, fan, fast, finding, first, five, flash, flickr, for, form, free, ft, fun, gadget, gadgets, geek, gm, gui, guide, guitar, hack, hacker, hackers, hall, hand, hands, hard, hardware, hat, head, hi, hose, how to, ic, ice, ideas, ign, image, images, in, information, instrument, instruments, interes, interesting, ios, ipad, is, it, italia, italian, italy, ken, key, kind, kit, las, launch, lay, learn, led, light, link, liquid, lit, live, long, low, m, ma, machine, magazine, mail, make, man, me, memory, men, met, micro, mid, mod, monitor, nec, new, no, none, not, ny, nz, o, of, old, ons, open, open-source, other, pack, pad, page, part, parts, pen, people, phone, phones, photo, photos, plan, plant, plants, pop, popular, pos, power, powerful, pr, present, pro, problem, processor, product, project, q, r, rad, radio, rain, real, relative, rice, rim, ring, robot, roc, rom, run, sa, same, scratch, sensor, sensors, service, show, simple, slate, sm, smartphone, smartphones, son, source, sp, startup, startups, still, student, system, table, tables, tablet, tan, tat, tech, test, texas, the, this, ti, tie, tim, time, to, top, try, turin, tweet, two, uni, up, usa, usb, user, version, vest, video, virtual, wall, war, water, wii, wire, wired.com, wireless, with, work, www, x4, xm, yo, you, your | No Comments »
Monday, June 14th, 2010
We have featured quite a few different steampunk themed gadgets here at Geeky Gadgets , the latest one is the creation of Matthew Garten, and might just be the coolest we have seen so far, the Steampunk Arduino Watch.
View original post here:
Steampunk Arduino Watch Plays Breakout | Geeky Gadgets
Tags: a-few-different, amp, arduino, art, ati, cool, creation, featured, geek, have-featured, steampunk, the-coolest, watch
Posted in AR, EA, One, Red, Team, UI, Uncategorized, W, a, ad, amp, arduino, art, arte, ati, c, cool, dg, f, featured, gadget, gadgets, geek, in, is, it, m, ma, matt, me, no, o, of, q, r, steampunk, the, theme, ti, watch | No Comments »
Monday, June 14th, 2010
We have featured quite a few different steampunk themed gadgets here at Geeky Gadgets , the latest one is the creation of Matthew Garten, and might just be the coolest we have seen so far, the Steampunk Arduino Watch.
Go here to see the original:
Steampunk Arduino Watch Plays Breakout | Geeky Gadgets
Tags: a-few-different, art, featured, gadget, have-featured, have-seen, here-at-geeky, matt, steampunk, the-coolest, watch
Posted in AR, EA, One, Red, Team, UI, Uncategorized, W, a, ad, amp, arduino, art, arte, ati, c, cool, dg, f, featured, gadget, gadgets, geek, in, is, it, m, ma, matt, me, no, o, of, q, r, steampunk, the, theme, ti, watch | No Comments »