Green Matters on MSN
Man Built a Tennis Ball-Sized 'Artificial Sun' and Switched It on in a Dark Forest
'I've never seen a light like this before. That is wild,' YouTuber Mathew Perks said.
In recent years, integrated platforms equipped with microcontrollers (with Arduino probably being the best-known brand) have been gaining popularity.
If you happen to be in the market for a small artificial sun, you may be interested to know that for about $1300, you can get a tennis-ball-sized LED array that outputs 120,000 lumens.
A lot of making goes on in this community these days, but sometimes you’ve just gotta do some old fashioned hacking. You might have grabbed an old Speak and Spell that you want to repurpose ...
One of the problems with being a graffiti artist is that you have to carry around a different spray can for each color you intend to use. [Sandesh Manik] decided to solve this problem by building ...
The Dabao open-source hardware board features a Boachip-1x RISC-V MCU, whose RTL Verilog files are also open, and is IRIS inspectable.
More than one-fifth of US electricity is used to power artificial lighting. Light-emitting diodes based on group III/nitride semiconductors are bringing about a revolution in energy-efficient lighting ...
How-To Geek on MSN
How I test Raspberry Pi Pico projects without any Pi hardware
A resistor in the cloud is worth two in the hand.
Why is punctuation important? Neil and Alice discuss rhetoric, commas and full stops.
This library is designed for Arduino, ESP32, ESP8266... to control LED: on, off, toggle, fade in/out, blink, blink the number of times, blink in a period of time. It is designed for not only beginners ...
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