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Basically, the controller is a glove with an embedded Arduino microcontroller and accelerometer. The accelerometer uses sensors to detect the motion and speed of your hand, while the connected ...
and there are very few Arduino-powered DIY projects cooler than YouTuber MadGyver’s DIY Time Machine Glove. With a name like that, how you could not love it? Of course, the Time Machine Glove ...
It lookes highly reproducible, as you can see the video, below the break. The glove uses an Arduino’s analog to digital converter to read some flex sensors. Commercial flex sensors are pretty ...
You know, I love the Power Glove. Obviously, because it’s so bad. Not rad bad, but bad bad. It never really worked right, and despite mods like this one over the years, it’s never really found ...
Magnus is an Arduino-powered exoskeleton that uses pairs of electromagnets and permanent magnets to actuate your fingers with superhuman quickness. In their tests, it reached peak force in just 11 ...
[Bruno Ratnieks] is responsible for this musical glove and his methods will be very easy to recreate. He used an Arduino to interface with it while providing a USB connection to your audio software.
It consists of a open-source portable Arduino/AVR-powered glove that uses touch combinations (for keys) and an accelerometer (for the mouse). Removing the need to use the traditional QWERTY ...
The sleep monitor was developed using an Arduino Nano for their final ECE 4760 project and takes the form of a base station and glove which measures heart rate using an infrared sensor together ...
For the transmitter device, a Seeduino Xiao Arduino-compatible microcontroller board is connected to a hand glove, along with an accelerometer and a button for switching modes. On the software ...
James Vincent is a senior reporter who has covered AI, robotics, and more for eight years at The Verge. Hughes told The Verge he built the original gripper below, before working Baumgarten on the ...