General

General

ZigBee Clock

I’m working on a physical clock that also broadcasts time to the entire ITP floor via XBee ZigBee radio. The time signal can be picked up by any project on the floor that incorporates ZigBee, and used for anything from clock display to inter-project synchronization. The code is being written in PIC Basic Pro. At […]

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Moisture Meter

This moisture meter was based on a circuit from Forrest Mim’s excellent “Getting Started in Electronics” book. It uses an Ampere meter (not pictured) via a amplifying transistor to display the conductivity of the soil in a planter. And it works! This setup may be the basis for our primary plant sensors for ITPlant.

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Sampling from Samtec

Samtec will sample small quantities of parts (usually no more than 10 of each. However their web site is confounding. If you want to find a part number, request or download a catalog first. When you are ready to order, use the Samtec Sample Form Put in the Item number and Quantity only. You don’t

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BlueSMiRF AT Commands

May 15, 2007: Apparently the AT commands for the BlueSMiRF radios are a trade secret. BlueRadios requested that they not be posted. So, uh, don’t use them I guess? Here’s the AT command set for BlueSMiRF modules. It’s tremendously handy to know all this stuff when working with the modules. I had high hopes that

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Stirling Engine

Matt, Teresa and I built a full-scale Stirling engine for use as a power source for a future mechanical computer. Stirling engines are external combustion engines. This one will derive its power from pressure differences created by the exchange of heat between hot and cold water compartments. We’re a bit concerned that the crankshaft may

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Paper Clock

Matt, Teresa and I created a paper clock from a kit using X-Acto knives, white glue and human tears. While the tolerances weren’t close enough for it to actually keep time, we learned quite a bit about the internal mechanics of timekeeping, and spent 20 happy hours together in the Physical Computing lab. Clocks rock.

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Tentative Design Schedule: Object-Oriented Objects

9/20. Define project precisely. How many behaviors per object, how many objects, what behaviors, what variables, how communications will work… 10/4. Interactions chosen, Objects chosen and roughly illustrated. 10/18. Prototype of objects and interactions ready for initial user testing. 11/1. Engineering for networking completed. Robust communications. Draft CAD drawings for objects. 11/8. CAD of objects

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