News

Here is an artistic Arduino project for the fun-minded. The circuit is an Arduino RGB LED controller running on a sweet ‘n’ simple code,but with a little hardware surprise outside the Arduino board.
To ground the LED busses, we’ll be using four 2N2222 transistors. The Arduino will trigger each transistor individually through a 1Kohm resistor. The collector of each transistor connects to a ...
Hackaday Alum [Phil Burgess] developed the device using an RGB LED matrix, microphone, and an Arduino. You’ll notice that is doesn’t include an MSGEQ7 chip which we see in most of these types ...
This is a great building block for a future project using the Velostat or the RGB LED. It will also prepare the user on how to successfully hook the Velostat up to an Arduino and how to code for it.
Low-cost thermal camera built using Arduino. ... To replicate Krejci’s design, you need an Arduino UNO Rev3 board, an AMG8833 infrared sensor module, and an 8×8 RGB LED matrix.
Infineon's RGB LED Lighting Shield is one two of Arduino-based evaluation boards created to showcase the capabilities of its ARM-based XMC1000 MCUs in lighting and motor control applications. Unlike ...
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’ ...
Arduino RGB Matrix Shield 10:07 am June 21, 2018 By Julian Horsey Adafruit has this week announced the arrival of the new Arduino RGB Matrix Shield which is now available to purchase priced at $5.95.