What if I told you that you could build a display out of shoe laces!? Well that is exactly what I’ve done!
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What if I told you that you could build a display out of shoe laces!? Well that is exactly what I’ve done!
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This instructable is for a back lit Skyrim themed monopoly board. The board is made using a custom made game board, LED light strips, Arduino, some wood work, epoxy resin, and Photoshop (Gimp in my case), and a lot of 3d printed components. The first step is to create a wooden frame for the board.
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If you like to rely on the web to do your electronics and computer math, you’ll want to bookmark FxSolver. It has a wide collection of formulae from disciplines ranging from electronics, computer science, physics, chemistry, and mechanics. There are also the classic math formulations, too.
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Electronics takes a lot of math. Once you’ve mastered all the algebra and calculus, though, it is sometimes a drag to go through the motions. It also can be error-prone. But these days, you have Wolfram Alpha which will do all the work for you and very easily.
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Hackaday brought you a first look the Arduino MKR Vidor 4000 when it announced.
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The Atari 5200 is a vintage gaming system from the early 1980s. At the time I owned a 2600, but I always wanted a 5200. Well, in 2018 I finally decided to find one on eBay and buy it.
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This Instructable was inspired by the Instructables’ Rainbow Contest: indicate time using the CountClock concept, using all colors of the rainbow. This instructable presents all manufacturing design files and the Arduino program code to make your own Rainbow CountClock.
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From Hamsterworks Wiki! There is no denying it, Analogue VGA is on the way out. Which is a shame really, because it is so easy to get an FPGA to drive a few resistors and put a picture up on the screen. It’s a great ‘stretch’ project for the FPGA first-timer. But it does have a downside.
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README file for Artix 7 HDMI processing ======================================= Hi! This is my design for receiving HDMI input, then extracting the video data, the Video Inforframe and audio samples, then using that to display audio db meters on the top corner of the screen.
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