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After waiting almost a month, I opened up the OLED and went right to testing it out. The link in the description pointed me to this website, which is a tutorial from Adafruit. Apparently, Adafruit ...
Posted in clock hacks Tagged arduino, enigma, horology, oled, pocket watch ← Etch-a-Sketch 3D Printed With Cell Phone New Transistor Uses Metal And Air Instead Of Semiconductors → ...
Arduino users may be interested in a new mini OLED display created by Rabid Prototypes which combines a 32-bit 48MHz ARM Cortex M0+ micro-controller complete with colour OLED display and MicroSD ...
The Pixelduino, that is equipped with a full colour 1.5 inch Arduino OLED display and has been designed by Rabid Prototypes and includes a built-in microSD card ...
Do you desire a teeny, tiny, little Arduino board with OLED display? You bet you do! Microview is a new "chip-sized" Arduino on Kickstarter that costs $45. What can it do? All kinds of stuff!
Call it synchronicity, or manually setting a 16-bit number in an Arduino, or how to turn an OLED into a rotary dial ...
The MicroView is a "Chip-Sized" arduino-compatible that features a built-in OLED display, and is sized perfectly for bread boarding, or use in many different projects. Unlike many of the Arduino ...
Arduino is little open source circuit board that lets you create some fairly compelling projects with a few lines of code and some circuit boards. The ...
SJEC-AICTE IDEA lab in collaboration with Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE) at St Joseph ...
You can use a microcontroller to build a clock. After all, a clock is just something that counts the passage of time. The ...