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To let its employees socialize from 300 miles away, ad agency Allen & Gerritsen hacked together an interactive game using RFID sensors, an Arduino, and some custom in-house development. Now ...
An Arduino, a spent roll of toilet paper, magnet wire, and a few passive components are what’s needed to build this RFID spoofer. It’s quick, dirty, and best of all, simple. However, [S… ...
Instructables user talk2bruce created the Arduino Internet Gizmo, a card reader that takes you to your favorite websites with a touch of an RFID tag.
Built your very own parking sensors for the car using nothing more than an Arduino board and cheap components you can find online ...
If you can dream it, Arduino can help you build it -- perhaps with a dash of MakerBot thrown in for good measure. The latest homebrew project to hit the ol' inbox sounds an alarm whenever you ...
A cool RFID music table has been created using Arduino, iPod, and RFID tags to make it easy to change albums by simply changing the RFID tag. Each RFID tag has an individual code number relating ...
ams’ SL13A and SL900A are sensor-enabled RFID tags enabling the simple and cheap implementation of a new class of wireless data-logging applications.