Blink(1) – Review
I’ve already blogged some months ago about the blink(1) project: the designer – ThingM – chose to fund it through the Kickstarter crowdfunding platform. It was the first campaign I backed and now I’ve finally received it.
I’ve already blogged some months ago about the blink(1) project: the designer – ThingM – chose to fund it through the Kickstarter crowdfunding platform. It was the first campaign I backed and now I’ve finally received it.
When you want to make Arduino “talk” on your network, you usually choose the HTTP protocol, that allows to use a web browser (IE, Firefox…) as a client. Sometimes however you need Arduino to send data to other applications: in this case you can implement a socket connection.
Sometimes, on this blog I write about cheap PCB services: how to use SeeedStudio’s Fusion PCB service, the availability colored PCBs from iTeadStudio, a quality comparison between the two services above and OSHPark… Brad today posted an interesting comparison between the price of three famous services… For example, considering only the cheapest service (without caring about production time) here’s the…
When I published my Type4me project, someone wrote me pointing out that the steps to send your sequence of characters to the device were a little complicated: open a terminal emulator (PuTTY…) connect to the correct serial port send the sequence check if the device answers correctly (OK!) For this reason, I’ve just finished the first…
Today’s project was designed to solve the need to enter, using a keyboard, the same sequence of characters (a password, a greeting…) many times.
Today’s tutorial is about getting an accurate time via Internet, using the NTP (Network Time Protocol) service.
Today I’m going to show you an unusual way to send SMS from Arduino…
Today’s tutorial is a bit different: I’m going to show you how to make your ethernet shield wireless!
This quick tutorial comes from a request Antonio posted in a comment: how to change the default port the webserver is listening on.
I was looking for a cheap solution to add a motor to my Arduino and I found a kit that includes an unipolar stepper motor and the driver board.