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Tarts Sensors allow both developers and hobbyists the ability to develop wireless sensor networks with Arduino, Raspberry Pi and BeagleBone. Contacts Tarts Sensors Matt Moulton, 801-255-9910 press ...
My shed is mostly done, which means I'm moving onto other projects that look a lot like landscaping. Lawns, gardens, etc. I want to be efficient in my watering, and potentially even lazy and have ...
In the near future, we will all reside in households that contain hundreds of little devices intertwingled together with an easily connectable and controllable network of sensors. For years, projec… ...
Okay, all you Arduino fans, now that you've mastered the basics of blinking LEDs, driving motors, and monitoring environmental sensors, you're ready for something a little more interesting, right?
Wireless sensor networks are nothing new to Hackaday, ... [Felix] is using a Moteino, a very tiny Arduino compatible board with solder pads for an RFM12B and RFM69 radio transceivers.
In May, Atmel and Arduino showed off a new development board called Zero to build electronics and wearable devices. Last month, Atmel launched a set of ARM-based microcontrollers with sensors and ...
The microcontroller-based concept was chosen because I wanted to scale the sensor system later to suit other applications. Here is the diagram of my Arduino infrared close proximity sensor. As you can ...
As with other Arduino-compatible boards, the Pinoccio can be used with external sensors, though it includes a temperature sensor as standard. They're small too.
Deba168's system uses two Arduinos, an RF transmitter, a motion sensor, and a few other parts to piece it all together. When the motion sensor detects movement, it buzzes the other Arduino.
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