Sysop: | Amessyroom |
---|---|
Location: | Fayetteville, NC |
Users: | 40 |
Nodes: | 6 (0 / 6) |
Uptime: | 87:54:59 |
Calls: | 196 |
Calls today: | 3 |
Files: | 134 |
Messages: | 96,265 |
Anyone else there like playing with these things? I'm sure I can do more wit
them but sofar I use D1 Mini's for temp/humidity sensors.
Those seems reasonable. I have like 8 Rasp Pis around my place (weather station, cameras, etc.etc.etc.) but one of the engineers I work with got me an Arduino Micro to play with.
What I didn't like about the Micro, is that you had to compile
everything just to run something - and I typo a LOT and it causes issues for me there.
I design Circuit Boards and CAD drawings at my new place of work. So I
get to see a lot of neat new things and play around.
In past I have enjoyed watching videos of people doing things like this but it is a little above my head, I hate to admit. ;)
is referred to Arduino programming a lot from what I see. There is a guy name
"Paul McWhorter" on youtube that has some really great tutorials for people with no knowledge but a will to learn. His whole youtube schtick is teaching microcontroller programming and small PC's like Pi's and Jepsons...
Yeah.. esp-32s are like that too.. task specific code, recompile and upload for each change. Its annoying sometimes but when you are in a coding zone you don't even notice...
Oooo... now the circuit board design is interesting to me. I'm
guessing you use something like Eagle or Fusion 360? I think we'd need another lockdown for me to be able to spend the time to learn all of
that.
The funnest thing I did besides the weather station, gaming console,
etc., was make a little circuit and attach it to my DSLR during a solar eclipse. I attached some old welder's visor to the end of the lens and used the pi to remotely take photos .. what a neat project.
No, we are currently using Cadence OrCAD and Siemens PADS.
Lol - I was working at a local dealership as a mechanic/technician
during the lockdown - I wish I was working here because I would have
been able to work from home and still get paid.
I've really only just done sensors.. temp, humidity, moisture, light. I'm probably going to do a robot soon.. nothing major.. just a line follower or maybe a spider. The biggest thing I did is basically the 3D printer. I learned a lot by building my own mostly from scratch.
Kinda figured you'd be using something more industrial and unknown to me ;)
I've always been in IT. My partner is in healthcare.. so I stayed
home, she worked. I still made money from home though so it all worked out in the end. But as a result.. I had a couple months vacation to obsess over something because I couldn't leave the house to do other things. It was a gift in disguise.