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| | | | | brickexperimentchannel.wordpress.com | |
| | | | | Time to add electronic parts and connect wires for the submarine. Computer The computer's main task is to control depth. It takes sensor data and drives the syringe motor in a control loop. The control loop doesn't have to be fast as the submarine moves very slowly. I first considered using Raspberry Pi Pico, which... | |
| | | | | jborza.com | |
| | | | | Over a month ago I bought an Altera Cyclone IV board from a local seller, it seems to be listed on Aliexpress as well. Its marked as A-C4E6E10, and features: Altera Cyclone IV EP4CE6E22C8 FPGA chip with 6272 logic elements, 270 Kbits of memory 8-digit seven-segment LCD display 8 position DIP switch VGA output PS/2 input port (comes in handy to try out keyboard processing) buzzer a couple of push buttons a handful of IO pins, some of which can be used as a connector for a 1602/12864 display and 22 miscell... | |
| | | | | blog.brixit.nl | |
| | | | | Designing electronics is neat. This is a look into designing my own ESP8266 based sensor board. | |
| | | | | michael.stapelberg.ch | |
| | | init7 recently announced that with their FTTH fiber offering Fiber7, they will now sell and connect you with 25 Gbit/s (Fiber7-X2) or 10 Gbit/s (Fiber7-X) fiber optics, if you want more than 1 Gbit/s. This is possible thanks to the upgrade of their network infrastructure as part of their "lifecycle management", meaning the old networking gear was declared as end-of-life. | ||