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DIY - Как сделать усилием чувствительный резистор для около $20!

Вывешено внутри Цепи, Едок, Холодно, DoItYourself!, Воспитательно, Устройства, HOWTO, Hack, Microcontroller максимумом 9-ого июля 2008 на 11:54 am

DIY - Как сделать усилием чувствительный резистор для около $20!

Здесь холодное DIY показывая вам как сделать усилием чувствительный резистор для около $6-$20.

Будет большой дорогой построить что-то нужно воспринять «усилие» что-то such as ваша прочность руки, прочность ноги, etc… etc  In other words, вы смогли построить машину игры soccer с ей.

через instructables

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Solar Tree Collects energy during the Day and Poops it back at Night!

Posted in Consumer, Cool, Design, DoItYourself!, Educational, Entertainment, Gadgets, LED, Microcontroller, Projects, lights by max on the June 16th, 2008 at 8:18 am

Solar Tree Collects energy during the Day and Poops it back at Night!

Here’s an interesting solar tree that collects energy during the day and emits pulses of lights at night.

Collects and stores solar energy during the day, emits controlled pulses of light at night. Pulse frequency: 0.2Hz

via make - ladyada

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DIY AVR tri-color LED controller

Posted in Consumer, Cool, DoItYourself!, Educational, Gadgets, LED, Microcontroller by max on the June 6th, 2008 at 8:33 am
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DIY - How to Make a Wireless Accelerometer Mouse Pointer!

Posted in Computer, Consumer, Cool, DoItYourself!, Educational, Gadgets, HOWTO, Microcontroller, Mouse, Projects by max on the June 5th, 2008 at 10:22 am
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DIY HACK - How to make your own Automated “James Bond style” Party Room!

Posted in Consumer, Cool, DoItYourself!, Educational, Entertainment, Funny, Gadgets, Hack, Household, LED, Microcontroller, Projects, Video, lights by max on the May 7th, 2008 at 10:27 am

Click Here to View in Full Screen Mode

One of our long-time readers and a winner of a free Green Laser, Brian Gaut from Schwippy, has made a new website explaining how to make the Emergency Party Button and transform your livingroom into an automated “Jame Bond style” party room.

As seen in the video, this is a great way to transform your livingroom into a party dance club.

Once Brian presses on the emergency party button, the curtain closes automatically, light dim out, then all the party lights, music, laser, steam, and strobe lights start coming out.

Really neat, great job Brian for finally documenting your party invention!

Basically, it is exactly what it sounds like; a button that instantly launches a party. When pressed, the blinds to my apartment close, the kitchen, hallway, dining room, and living room lights dim, the stereo starts blasting Haddaway - What Is Love, black lights turn on, laser lights start moving to the music, a strobe light goes on, and the fog machine starts up.

With another press of the button, the party is gone as easily as it started.

It may not be the most hi-tech thing in the world, but people sure as hell love it when they come over.

DIY HACK - How to make your own Emergency Party Button!

(The Emergency Party Button)

DIY HACK - How to make your own Emergency Party Button!2

(Strobe Light)

DIY HACK - How to make your own Emergency Party Button!3

(Fog Machine)

The parts are pretty discrete so if you live with your parents, you might even use this method to “hide” your weekend parties while your parents are gone.

via plasma2002

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DIY - How to build your own G-Force Meter!

Posted in Circuits, Consumer, Cool, DoItYourself!, Educational, Entertainment, Gadgets, HOWTO, Microcontroller, Projects, Travel, Video by max on the April 27th, 2008 at 1:52 am

Click Here to View in Full Screen Mode

Remember I did a G-Force Meter couple years ago? Here’s another cool DIY G-Force meter. The only difference it that it uses 7-segment display and a PIC18F series microcontroller.

After seeing so many applications using acceleromters making a simple project of my own with this cool sensor just seemed natural.
The main application of the accelerometer is either for sensing tilt or sensing acceleration. For this application A G-Force meter for my car will be made to see how many “G’s” I pull while driving.

via HackedGadgets

Related:

How to make a G-force meter in 1 minute!

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DIY - Robotic Yellow Drum Machine plays Drums!

DIY - Robotic Yellow Drum Machine plays Drums!

Wow, this has to be one of the cooler DIY robots I’ve seen in a long time. Basically, it plays drums. Not real drums, but it plays your household stuff like vases as drums. Beautifully done, we give it an A+ for the creators. (Btw, we are not selling the blog for $1000, our readers say it’s too cheap! How much should we sell it for? j/k April FOOLS!)

Notice how the robot first plays on the object it finds (or is forced to find by the angry cameraman), plays a small beat, and records the beat it plays on it. Then this recorded beat is played again, and it starts to play on the object (an belt tracks and everything else it has),and also playing this sampled beat :)

[via] letsmakerobots

Click to enjoy the video

Continue reading ‘DIY - Robotic Yellow Drum Machine plays Drums!’

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Atmel AVR HACK - Temperature Controller using Microcontroller AVR

Posted in Circuits, Cool, DoItYourself!, Educational, Hack, Industrial, LED, Microcontroller, Projects by max on the January 26th, 2008 at 3:49 pm

Tempereature Controller using Microcontroller AVR

Check out the Atmel AVR temperature controller hack, although I made a better one last year that can be controlled via ethernet, the case looks awesome!

Wine doesn’t like subzero temperatures, and during wintertime, my “winecellar” got pretty cold.
There was an electric heating element, but the thermostat was broken, so it was either full burn or nothing.

That’s how the temperature monitor/controller came to be.
It was an obvious task for a small processor and I’ve always wanted to test the Dallas temperature sensors.

So, I designed this little device which could monitor the temperature and control the heater.

via Aboutmicrocontroller.blogspot.com

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DIY HACK - HOWTO make some sounds with Arduino! Sound Part 3 - Playing a Melody

Posted in Arduino, Audio, Circuits, Cool, DoItYourself!, Hack, Microcontroller, Music by max on the November 24th, 2007 at 3:30 am

DIY HACK - HOWTO make some sounds with Arduino! Sound Part 3 - Playing a Melody

Check out the Part 3 of “HOWTO make sounds with Ardunio” and learn to play melody.

Bit-Banging Sound
To bit-bang sound we toggle an output pin at the desired frequency. To play a musical note, we need to use specific frequencies and play the sound for a specific amount of time.

Generating the desired frequency big-bang style means figuring out what the period or cycle time of the desired frequency is. This is easy to calculate, it’s the reciprocal (1/F) of the frequency. As we found in part 2, 1KHz is 1000 cycles per second. So, one cycle takes 1 one-thousandth (1/1000) of a second or 0.001 seconds (1 millisecond). We need to toggle the pin at this rate so we want to keep it low for 1/2 the time then high for 1/2 the time. Therefore we want to set the I/O pin low for 500uS, then high for 500uS and do this over and over for as long as the duration requires.

Part I and Part II

via uchobby

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