So you've already outgrown Arduino's most beginner-friendly board, the Uno, and are looking to move on to bigger, more exciting projects. In that case, the Nano family might just be what you need.
Unlike an Arduino board that requires external components to be functional, a Raspberry Pi is a powerhouse by itself right out of the box. It is, after all, a computer. This means that by simply ...
In that awkward transition phase between electromechanical accounting systems used in the 1940s and the introduction of fully ...
We’ve seen just about every possible way to make a clock here at Hackaday over the years. So it’s rare to have a first, but ...
Researchers working with the roundworm C. elegans have identified a feedback loop between two proteins that functions as a ...
A developmental timer that fires thousands of genes in precise, phase-locked bursts has been mapped in detail for the first ...
ESP32 is a tiny cheap 8$ module with a dual core 32-bit CPU and built in Wi-Fi and dual-mode Bluetooth with sufficient amount of 30 I/O pins for all basic electronics projects. All these features are ...
Think of a busy road where hundreds of riders pass every minute, some wearing helmets, many not, and imagine trying to monitor all of them… ...
ESP32 + LwIP W5500 / ENC28J60, including ESP32-S2, ESP32-S3 and ESP32-C3, Connection and Credentials Manager using AsyncWebServer, with enhanced GUI and fallback Web ConfigPortal ...