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This is tutorial number 1 from our series of Arduino tutorials and in this part I will talk about blinking an LED using the one already available on the Arduino Uno board or using an external LED to ...
In this experiment we are going to use a element called photoresistor. This sensor allows us to interact with the external environment, through intensity of light. The photoresistor is based on light ...
The end of the lights should be at the bottom of the garment, so you can put the battery pack and Arduino in your pocket. If you have access to a 3D printer and want to get fancy, search ...
Learn how to control and blink multiple LEDs using the MAX7219 driver with Arduino. A simple guide for beginners in electronics and coding. #Arduino #MAX7219 #LEDProjects #ElectronicsTutorial ...
All the info you need right here ✦ In this occasion I'll make a lighting system to be controlled remotely from my rc using ...
The light wand is based on an Arduino Mega board and uses an RGB LED strip based on the HL1606 controller chip. We’ve covered these LED strips before, and they’re very easy to use with the ...
To drive the LEDs, [Ole] is using an Arduino. Even though the WS2812s are individually addressable and only one data pin is needed, [Ole] is using five individual data lines for this matrix.
Check out the final results -- which feature 3,300 mini lights, 3 spotlights, an LED Rope, 4 LEDs, and one magical reindeer -- in the video after the break.
Be still my beating heart! Andrew O'Malley's pulsing heart lamp looks alive with two Arduino-controlled settings: soft beating and cardiographic wave.