News

Tata Nano Images - Check here the Tata Nano photos including high quality Nano car images for interior and exterior with road test gallery and the 360-degree view of Nano.
Hardware-wise, there is an Arduino Nano Every in charge of the LDR module that reads the flashlight input and the 12 V relay that unlocks the door. Be sure to check it out it the video after the ...
Create a smart blind stick using Arduino to help visually impaired individuals navigate safely. This DIY project uses an ultrasonic sensor, buzzer, and LED indicators to detect obstacles and provide ...
Like the Nano, the Micro's size and male pin headers make it perfect for prototyping with a breadboard. However, Arduino also offers this board without headers pre-soldered.
The schematic-configured breadboard, comes with integrated analog and digital functions, variable power supply, and Arduino capability.
While relatively old, the Arduino Nano is still priced at $24.90, which is a significant price leap from the more recent and more affordable Nano Every that you can get for $13.70.
We built the Bus Overload Alert System using Arduino. Now, why and where can we use this detection/counter system? Child safety is a paramount concern, but, unfortunately, India has one of the highest ...
One for Gadget Masters to note: there's a new version of the Arduino Nano - the IoT-friendly Nano ESP32 - bringing the Espressif ESP32-S3 microcontroller into the Arduino ecosystem. The Wi-Fi and ...
According to Arduino, the Nano ESP32 brings plug-and-play IoT deployments to advanced enterprise use cases and hobbyist engineers. The Nano ESP32 18×45-mm development board is available to order today ...
The power of Espressif’s ESP32-S3 meets Arduino’s unmatched customer experience, documentation and community — all in the compact form factor of the Nano. Provides support for both ...
This is the SB116, an 8-bit programmer’s calculator powered by an Arduino Nano. It features a 128 x 64 pixel monochrome OLED display and can be powered by either a USB port or three AAA batteries.
Running a program on an Arduino is easy, but have you tried doing it with a Pi? The Raspberry Pi is powerful enough to be a standalone computer and is also good enough to program a microcontroller.