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Archive for the 'site updates' Category

Thursday, November 1st, 2007

Will the blinky ever stop? No! Not while I have tutorials to write.

This tutorial will teach you about switches and buttons, inputs, pull up and pull down resistors, debouncing, if and if-else statements and in the end you will build your own LED bike light, just like the ones you see in stores retailing for $25.



Click here to read this fun fun fun tutorial!

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007


Ready for more Arduino tutorials? I’ve crawled out from under a pile of kits and finished up #4! This lesson will teach you all about sending data from the Arduino to the computer. You’ll also learn how to crunch numbers and juggle data. You can also watch as I make awful diagrams using Visio! Check it out here!

Haven’t checked out the tutorials? They are waiting patiently for you!

Friday, September 21st, 2007

One of the nice things about the Arduino boards & software is they let people get started hacking electronics fast. However, I was looking for a good step-by-step tutorial that helped people with almost no experience through the first few steps of microcontroller programming and basic electronics design. At the same time, I’d been flipping through Parallax’s excellent “What is a Microcontroller” workbook and decided to start writing something similar.

So check out my Arduino Tutorial page and give me feedback! Right now I’ve got 3 lessons up, and will try to get a another 3 out in the next week and a half.

  • Lesson 0
    Pre-flight check…Is your Arduino and computer ready?
  • Lesson 1
    The “Hello World!” of electronics, a simple blinking light
  • Lesson 2
    Sketches, variables, procedures and hacking code
  • Lesson 3
    Breadboards, resistors and LEDs, schematics, and basic RGB color-mixing

At the end of lesson three, you build a mood lamp!

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

Get your ohmmeters out, kids. It’s time for part 2 of how to use a multimeter, this time for all of your resistor-measuring needs.

You will Learn:

  • How to measure resistors (duh)
  • The difference between auto-ranging and ranged meters and what to watch out for
  • How to characterize and test potentiometers and certain sensors.

I also attempt to uncover the reason why all meter ranges start with the number 2.

Click here to read the tutorial!

There’s lots of video clips, many of which are extremely boring compared to YouTube. Like check this one out of me shading an LDR

I strongly recommend adding it to your myspace!@

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

If you design and hack electronics for fun or work, then you know that PCB costs can be a big part of your budget. There’s a lot of manufacturers there, and they all use different pricing schemes.
Argh! So hard to compare!
So I wrote a javascript PCB cost calculator. Just punch in your PCB size and the minimum number you need and it’ll give you an idea of how much it will cost to make (shipping is approximated)

See the screenshot below, then go and visit the Real Deal

screenshot

Wednesday, April 4th, 2007

This is the year of the kit!

Thanks to the ease of going into business, and the increasing demand for DIY kits, this is a great time for people to get involved in kit making. I’m starting to collect resources for kit-makers, including a list of existing kit-makers as well as hints and tricks I’ve learned from running Adafruit Industries

These two articles (Kitmakers and Kitmaking) cover things from how to deal with shipping & handling, to designing PCBs, to documentation and customer support. Check them out and make suggestions!

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

Amazon’s S3 (Simple Storage Service) isn’t new, but its certainly gaining traction. Its a wonderful product for people who have a lot of content on their site (images, video, downloads, pdfs) but not a lot of money. Data storage costs $0.15 per GB-Month (prorated), and $0.20 per GB. No minimums, rounded up to the nearest cent.

There are a lot of great providers out there (I use Laughing Squid and highly recommend it) but even LS’s ‘largest’ package is too small for ladyada.net… What to do? Easy: Host all that bulky content at S3, then use mod_rewrite to reroute it over to S3. (You could also do it with php, asp or similar for higher ’security’ but mod_rewrite is lighter and good enough for me)


For example, this image has the url reference “http://www.ladyada.net/images/mintyboost/assemblyv12/inductorusbplace_t.jpg” but if you access that url in your browser, it is automatically rewritten by apache to http://s3.amazonaws.com/ladyadanet_mintyboost/assemblyv12/inductorusbplace_t.jpg

(same with my research pdf, a big pdf that easily accounted for 500M a day of traffic at its peak! http://www.ladyada.net/media/common/thesis.pdf -> http://s3.amazonaws.com/ladyadanet_common/thesis.pdf , S3 doesn’t care what the data is or how its encoded)

Of course mod_rewrite is not necessary, you can always just directly reference s3.amazonaws.com but that makes it harder to move the content around if you decide to eventually go with another service (or if s3 goes away one day!)

OK so, what’s the point and what does this have to do with electronics, eh? Well one of the killer apps of open source and public domain electronics is documentation. That means media. And media storage, backup and transfer is extremely expensive for the everyday person. It becomes increasingly difficult to host a project when one digg-storm or slashdotting makes that ‘free’ webpage account go down.

Edit: I use the Firefox S3 plugin to upload and set the access control on my files.

Are you using S3 or something similar for your projects, kits or documentation? Leave a comment or email! Its always interesting to see what other people are doing in this space.

Monday, April 2nd, 2007


So now that you have a fun kit from one of the many reputable electronic kit makers, you are wondering “what soldering iron should I get?”

A fine question, grasshopper! And one that I can easily answer…I have researched three “kits” of tools for amateur electronics hobbyists: The $60 basic kit, $115 better kit, and the $275 best kit.

Mix & Match soldering irons, multimeters and wire cutters to get the set that fits you best.

Click “Read the rest…” to see the full “basic kit” as of this moment (it won’t be updated so be sure to bookmark http://www.ladyada.net/library/equipt-kits.html instead )
(more…)

Thursday, March 8th, 2007

Information is power.

In this case, exactly 35 Watts of power!

Check out the new Laser Information pages for all of your $20K laser cutter setup needs!

Its another Wiki embedded page: it looks like a normal web page but if you click the link at the top it will take you to the Wiki where the data is kept. That way, the 99% of people who just want the info don’t have to deal with the strange look of a wiki.

Tuesday, March 6th, 2007

I’ve decided to experiment with the Wiki architecture for dynamic/collaborative documentation. For my kits and projects, wiki’s make less sense than forums, but a lot of people email me with resources so the “parts procurement” page that has been so popular that I’ve turned it into embedded content.

Now when you have a suggestion for a company to sample from, you can just edit the wiki yourself!