It’s (one of) the most wonderful time(s) of the year: we’re on the road, heading to Newcastle for the Maker Faire UK 2016!
Read about it here.
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It’s (one of) the most wonderful time(s) of the year: we’re on the road, heading to Newcastle for the Maker Faire UK 2016!
Read about it here.
We’re heading to Newcastle for Maker Faire UK 2015 this weekend, and this little lot is coming with us. Let us know if we’ll be seeing you there!
Read more here.
Wondering what the #TeamArduinoCC hashtag is all about? It's evidence-gathering for a rather thorny legal battle between the co-founders of Arduino. Read about it here.
It's time to introduce #robox, your paper-based pal who's fun to be with and the biggest innovation in packaging since cardboard came corrugated. Meet him here!
Arduino goodness
So, my plans to build the Game of Life Clock took a step closer to reality today with the arrival of my order of stuff from Oomlout following the recommendation of a couple of people. Everything turned up within 24 hours of placing the order. Very impressed.
In addition to the 8x8 LED matrices I needed, I bought a new Arduino Duemilanove, since my old NG only has an ATMega8, with 8k of ram. This has been fine for tinkering, but was looking a bit tight for running the game, RTC and matrix driver chips. The Duemilanove has 32k of ram, which is tonnes more than I need.
It also gave me a chance to order the ARDX starter kit, which in addition to the Duemilanove has a bunch of extra stuff to play with. Given the Arduino-heavy nature of some of the dev8D workshops this year, it seemed like it'd be worth having some extra bits to play with.
I've not really done much this evening other than have a play with the first starter kit circuit, and get the latest arduino software up and running. It is worth noting that the 10mm LED that ships as part of the starter kit is a bit "argh, my eyes".
One thing that did come as a bit of a surprise was not having to hit the reset button to upload a new sketch. That'll take some getting used to.
Next up is driving an 8x8 LED matrix off a pair of 595 shift registers. I'm still torn between using shift registers or the much more sophisticated MAX7219 LED driver. Both have their advantages and disadvantages, so I think the best bet is to have a play and see...