|
You are here |
saccade.com | ||
| | | | |
blog.squix.org
|
|
| | | | | The Color Kit Grande is the latest update of the hardware kits which I started selling back in 2015. It started with the ESP8266 and a tiny B/W OLED display. A little later the ESP8266 Color Kit followed and added a bigger display with resistive touch screen to it. Buyers also had to do a... | |
| | | | |
jpieper.com
|
|
| | | | | In the previous post, I outlined a possible path to low cost off-axis encoders to be used with the moteus line of brushless controllers. The first step I took was to try and build a minimally sized breakout board that could be used with the MA732/MA702/MA600 line of hall effect angle sensors. You can get... | |
| | | | |
gregdavill.com
|
|
| | | | | Summary Texas Instruments has a range of 16 bit microcontrollers, the MSP430. To program these require what they call a Flash Emulation Tool (FET). Thankfully all their affordable development kits contain a small stripped down FET, known as the ezFET Lite. TI has open sourced this design and provide both the firmware and the schematics. I was given a tag-connect cable as a giveaway through the 43oh, MSP430 community forum. I decided to create a custom PCB to connect directly to the tag-connect cable. | |
| | | | |
thisdavej.com
|
|
| | | This article has been updated to cover the installation of Raspbian Bullseye Lite. In this tutorial, we're going to build a highly optimized Raspberry Pi system that runs very lean on resources with the help of Raspbian lite. Whereas a baseline Raspbian system consumes around 158 MB of RAM, Raspbian lite runs at a mere 34 MB. To achieve this lighter weight footprint, we must give up the graphical user interface (GUI); however, we'll include steps in the build (and tips) to help us work productively without a GUI. | ||