Recent DIY trends show makers increasingly turning to ESP32 microcontrollers and Arduino platforms for smart home projects, replacing costlier or overpowered setups like Raspberry Pi in many cases.
From your very first blinking LED to dazzling multi-color sequences, Arduino makes it easy to bring light to life. With just a board, a few LEDs, and some code, you can experiment with patterns, ...
Daniel Ansorregui has developed LightInk, an open-source solar-powered E-ink watch inspired by 90s solar digital watches. It ...
Waveshare UGV Beast is an off-road robot with tracked wheels designed for Raspberry Pi 4 or 5 SBC handling AI vision and ...
Researchers at The University of Osaka, in collaboration with ULVAC, Inc. and Ritsumeikan University, have developed a new ...
At nearly 8 feet wide the Lightwall is larger than most TVs but with much less resolution. is a senior reporter who’s been ...
If you were to point to a single device responsible for much of Hackaday’s early success, it might be the Arduino Uno. The ...
MicroPython is a well-known and easy-to-use way to program microcontrollers in Python. If you’re using an Arduino Uno Q, ...
Challenging Asimov’s Laws in Half an Hour Understanding Asimov’s Three Laws of ...
We've all heard that "if you want something done right, you have to do it yourself." And that’s usually fine when it comes to ...
This project demonstrates how to control an Arduino's LED through a Node.js server and synchronize the Arduino's RX and TX LEDs with a virtual representation in Unity. By using a serial connection to ...