News
Did you know that you can use Arduino to turn on an LED when you press a button? Well, it is true, you can do this! Leaving the joke aside, let me show how you can achieve this. You will need the ...
All it takes is an Arduino Nano R3 or comparable microcontroller, an RGB LED ring with 12 LEDs, a 16×2 LCD, a buzzer, and a momentary push button switch. Interestingly, ...
Simply push a button to scan the colour of the object and you’re given the RGB colour values as well as an indication of the measured colour on an RGB LED.” ...
Now, though, it shouldn’t be hard to control the RGB LED strips through an Arduino, ... Try pressing the “Fade7” button in the bottom right corner, I think there’s 1-7 options, ...
Here, a common cathode 7-segment LED display is connected to Arduino for displaying the digits. The code (Arduino sketch) allows push button increment of the counter from 0 to 9. The whole circuit can ...
For prototyping, Infineon has a RGB LED lighting control shield for Arduino, based around its ARM Cortex-M0 XMC1202 microcontroller. On board is something called a ‘brightness colour control unit’ ...
While we’ve seen many Raspberry Pi enclosures made out of LEGO in the past, this Portal-themed build with RGB lighting deserves a special nod. We spoke to the creator of this build, Instagram ...
“So for instance, you can have one Arduino with a button, another Arduino connected wirelessly with an LED, push the button and turn on the LED without any additional single line of code to handle the ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results