Tag Archives: Arduino Projects

Here are some unbelievable projects to help celebrate Arduino Day


With Arduino Day celebrations just about to kick off, let’s take a look at some cool ‘duino projects!


Atmel powers Arduino. Arduino enables Maker. Maker inspires the world. While there are countless creations all over the web, we’ve compiled just a few of the most dynamic and different ‘duino projects from the past couple of months to help celebrate March 28th.

As you can tell, the open-source platform has come a long way since its inception a decade ago. Today, the Arduino family has grown to include more than two dozen low-cost boards, a community with hundreds of thousands of tinkerers and over a million (and counting) Arduino units in the wild.

So without further ado, here’s some of our favorite projects to kickoff Arduino Day festivities!

Unlocking doors by saying ‘open sesame!’

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MIT student Dheera Venkatraman has developed a new way for users to wirelessly unlock their doors with simple Google Now-like commands.

Wearing an Enigma machine

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Designed by Maker “Asciimation” the Enigma wristwatch is a fully-functional wearable that replicates the original machine, which was used to cipher secret messages in the 20th century.

Changing the TV channel with your mind

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Maker Daniel Davis — who runs the website “Tinkernut” — has developed a homemade mind-controlled TV remote using an old Star Wars Force Trainer game and Arduino.

A wearable that lets you bring your teacher anywhere

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Like a hawk-eyed professor, this wearable device literally puts a teacher looking over your shoulder.

This book cover judges you instead

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Amsterdam creative studio Moore has turned the tables on an old-school idiom using a book sleeve equipped with an integrated camera and facial-recognition technology that scans the face of whoever comes near. If someone conveys too much emotion – whether overexcitement or under-enthusiasm — the book will remain locked.

Stopping cheaters in online video games

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To end cheating in online video game tournaments, software engineer David Titarenco developed what he calls Game:ref. Built around an Arduino Mega SDK, the device is capable of identifying mouse-based cheats that are typically seen in FPS, MOBA, RTS and other competitive games, ranging from auto-clicking to aimbots.

Catch ‘em all with help of Arduino

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Pepijn de Vos has created a system that acts as a Game Boy, storing a single Pokémon in EEPROM. This enables a user to trade between first-generation games using only a single console, all by themselves.

Tapping out tweets with on an old telegraph

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Maker Devon Elliot outfitted an old telegraph sounder seated in a wooden resonator with some modern-day electronics so that it could tap out tweets.

Detecting air pollution with a Steampunk helmet

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The Jacobson’s Fabulous Olfactometer is a head-mounted contraption that offers sensory augmentation for the human olfactory system under extreme living conditions of polluted cities.

Controlling electronic devices using cords

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Inspired by a water hose, MIT’s Tangible Media Group wants you to control your connected gadgets with their cords. Imagine if tightening a knot could dim a lamp, attaching a clip on a power cord could put a computer to sleep or kinking its wire could power it on/off.

The Internet of Ethical Things?

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Created by Simone Rebaudengo and Matthieu Cherubini, Ethical Things is a project that explores the effects of autonomous systems of the future as they head increasingly towards complex algorithms aimed at solving situations requiring some form of moral reasoning.

A smart table that listens and records meetings

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As its name implies, the Listening Table combines pervasive data collection and the Internet of Things into a new concept, one in which office furniture can listen and record your conversations, using an array of dynamic microphones. When a meeting concludes, participants can see a high-level summary digest showing all the topics discussed.

Now that’s doing-knit-yourself!

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The duo of Varvara Guljajeva and Mar Canet recently debuted the open-source circular knitting machine Circular Knitic. Initially built for a program called DOERS, which was curated by Arduino co-founder David Cuartielles, the DIY device was constructed using a RepRap printer along with some digital fabrication, laser cutting and MakerBeam, and is powered by an Arduino Uno.

Teaching a pup to send selfies

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One Maker proved that, by using the combination of an Arduino Yún, Twilio and a big red button, anyone can train their puppy to send selfies.

Visualize your city’s mood through tweets

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Maker Chadwick Friedman has devised a 3D-printed Twitter Mood Lamp that, as its name would suggest, changes colors to match the attitude of the city. The project is controlled by an Arduino Yún, which causes the device to emit either red, green, or blue based on whether the mood of the city is perceived to be angry, happy, or sad, respectively.

Tracking activities in lower Earth orbit

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Berlin studio Quadrature has developed a custom-built machine, called SATELLITEN, that is capable of keeping tabs on the number of satellite flyovers and plotting them in real-time on a paper map with ink.

Playing real-world Space Invaders with real-world lasers

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Martin Raynsford — who happens to be one of the owners of UK-based laser cutter manufacturer Just Add Sharks — decided to bring the classic game of Space Invaders to life using the hardware of a modified Whitetooth A1 laser cutter along with a laptop keyboard to serve as its gamepad. An Arduino Nano was mounted to a custom 80W laser controller to enable side-to-side movement to help shoot the paper invaders, each clipped to a plate and driven by stepper motors.

Dispensing music with Juice-Box

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For a school assignment, Maker Jae-Hwan Jung devised a soda dispenser-styled jukebox in a project he calls Juice-Box. Programmed with an assortment of musical flavors, users can “dispense” tunes in their own cup-shaped MP3 player. Each dispenser denotes a different genre, such as favorites, jazz, hip-hop or the blues.

Sending encrypted messages using social networks

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Made by Jochen Maria Weber, Cuckoo is device that uses social media as a means of private communication, and encrypts messages into randomly generated words, meanings and noise in order to scatter them over multiple networks simultaneously.

Get ready for your own robotic sidekick

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PLEN2 is a 3D-printable, humanoid robotic kit consisting of a control board, servo motors and other electronic accessories that let Makers of all levels put together themselves. Programmed to mirror its human counterpart, PLEN2 aspires to revolutionize the relationship between homo and robo sapiens.

Time traveling through augmented reality and smell

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A researcher employed an Arduino, an Arduino Wi-Fi Shield, a cheap computer fan and Unity3D software to explore the use of augmented reality within archaeological practice. A mobile app reconstructs real-world images by changing in real-time as the user moves about their environment, while a fan emits scents to make it as if you traveled to another time.

This drone attachment can save your life

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Launched on Kickstarter by a group of Connecticut high school students, Ryptide is an Arduino-powered drone accessory that can deliver an automatically-inflating life preserver to a swimmer in trouble in seconds.

Using your brain and visual stimuli to play music

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In collaboration with researcher Oscar Portolés, digital artist Fèlix Vinyals has developed a hybrid brain computer machine interface installation that allows him to create music and control the lighting during a performance on stage, all through the reading of the electric potential of his brain and visual stimuli.

A Bellagio-like fountain recreated with strings

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Replicating the likes of the Bellagio world-renowned display mixed with a 1950s synchronized swimming performance, Paolo Salvagione has whipped up a kinetic sculpture that uses propulsion to elevate a continuous piece of string into the air.

Art Vader?

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Crafted by Christopher Connell, this ambient Darth Vader poster wirelessly reacts to music playing in a room with various LED color-changing effects.

Automating your Etch-A-Sketch to recreate famous paintings

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Evan Long decided to mod his old Etch-A-Sketch using an Arduino Uno to enable the toy to draw famous pieces of art, including the Mona Lisa. The Maker added 3D-printed custom mounts to its knobs, which housed a pair of two stepper motors and ULN2803 to switch the 12V required for the steppers.

Turning twerking into music

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The Booty Drum is a high-tech musical device that, unlike most instruments, isn’t operated by your hands, feet or head for that matter, but by your posterior. This idea is a collaboration between headphone brand AIAIAI, professional dancer Twerk Queen Louise, Branko from Portuguese electronic band Buraka Som Sistema and Dutch design company Owow.

A robot that shovels for you

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The next time that you’re expecting 12” of snow, wouldn’t it be nice if there was a machine that could do the tedious task for you — without ever having to step foot outside? Well, a Maker by the name of Boris Landoni has devised just that: a remote-controlled snow plow robot powered by an Arduino Uno.

Right on pointé

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Designed by Lesia Trubat, Electronic Traces (E-Traces for short) are a pair of embedded pointé shoes which allow ballerinas to recreate their movements into visual sensations using an accompanying mobile app.

Chameleon-like jacket

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Designed by Oslo, Norway design firm Drap go Design, the Interacket is an ATmega328-powered jacket that lets a wearer interact with the objects around them by mimicking their color.

Click your heels three times and call an Uber ride

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Designed by Maker DJ Saul, Dorothy is a physical trigger that can turn a dumb ol’ shoe smart. Adhering to the “if this, then that” principle, the Ruby is an Arduino-based device equipped with a Bluetooth chip, accelerometer and coin cell battery, while its housing is 3D-printed. The small gadget can be either slipped into or clipped onto any piece of footwear and connected to a smartphone app that will automatically call a cab or send a message.

This talking fridge can sell itself

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In an attempt to provide shoppers with a less intrusive experience, Samsung equipped a number of its refrigerators with Arduino units that were capable of detecting customers and speaking to them in real-time. Whenever movement was sensed by any of the fridge’s interior compartments, the Arduino sensors activated a voice playback and explained the appliance’s features and benefits to the prospective buyer.

When ‘duino found Nemo

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Dutch design group Studio Diip modded an existing tank with wheels and sensors that would allow its inhabitant to operate the vehicle by swimming in a specific direction. The project, dubbed Fish on Wheels, is an attempt to “liberate fish all over the world.”

Color-changing fabrics react to heat and sound

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Judit Eszter Karpati, a Budapest-based textile designer, wanted to further blur the fading boundaries between the digital realm and physical world. To do so, the Maker created an e-textile that alters its patterns based on its surroundings, which is made possible by an Arduino board, a 12V power supply and nearly 20 custom PCBs.

An interactive fabric you’ll want to touch

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The brainchild of Esteban de la Torre and Judit Eszter Karpati, OCHO TONOS is an audible textile interface for multi-sensorial interaction, involving both touch and sound. The objective of the project was to create a soundscape through sensor technology inviting audiophiles to perform and explore with reactive textile elements.

Re-imagining the radio interface

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Audio broadcasting radios have been around since the 1920s. In fact, their control interface share many similarities — knobs, sliders and switches — with those designed by our ancestors nearly 100 years ago. Seeking to redefine the entire radio control experience, Carnegie Mellon University design student Yaakov Lyubetsky built a fully-functional prototype of an Experimental Form Radio using an Arduino Uno.

Wake up and smell the coffee

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For a majority of us, mornings just aren’t complete without your daily cup ‘o joe. Now, what if your instant coffee literally woke you up? Nestlé teamed with Mexcio City-based agency Publicis Mexico and Los Angeles studio NOTlabs to debut the Alarm Cap — a limited-edition, 3D-printed lid powered by an Arduino. The unique design is comprised of seven distinct alarm sounds, including a bird song, that are played in tandem with a gently pulsing light. To switch off the alarm, the user opens the lid and is greeted with the invigorating smell of Nescafé coffee.

This washing machine orders detergent when you’re out

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Cloudwash — designed by the folks at Berg — is a prototype washing machine (based on a standard Zanussi model) connected to a web platform. The team created the futuristic device to explore how the ever-growing Internet of Things would change the appliances most commonly found in our homes, and to discover what new, innovative features would be made possible.

A floating orb captures and replays ambient noise

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Created by Francesco Tacchini, Julinka Ebhardt and Will Yates-Johnson, 

Space Replay is a giant ball that constantly records and replays the sounds of public spaces, creating a delayed echo of human activity. To make the floating orb, the Maker trio used a latex balloon filled with enough helium to be able to lift a battery-powered, an Arduino, an Adafruit Wave Shield and a small speaker.

Samsung is making your bike smarter

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Designed by Italian frame-builder Giovanni Pelizzoli and student Alice Biotti, the Samsung Smart Bike is built around an aluminum frame that boasts curved tubes to soak up vibrations from riding on rough city streets. The frame is also equipped with a battery, an Arduino board, as well as Wi-Fi and Bluetooth modules.

Designing your own pair of Google Glass

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13-year-old Clay Haight designed something not many kids would have even imagined, particularly at that age: a Google Glass-inspired, intelligent pair of glasses. The young Maker used the sensors on the Arduino Esploraand an Arduino LCD screen, before piecing it all together on a 3D-printed frame.

This robot wants to add AI to everyday household objects

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Sure, robotic concepts are dime a dozen these days. The question is, however, how close are we to an era of ubiquitous multi-function droids? According to Flower Robotics, soon. In an effort to lower the barriers for development and adoption of in-house robots, the Tokyo-based design studio launched a futuristic, Arduino-based device that they call Patin.

Saying ‘I Love You’ with the IoT

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Israeli design student Daniel Sher has developed a trilogy of creations that can transmit silent gestures between loved ones. Using an Arduino for all three devices, the Maker utilized the Internet of Things to establish a new way for loved ones to communicate from afar. The Maker incorporated a series of sensors and wires that allowed various physical traits to be measured and relayed across long distances.

Free beer for your timesheet 

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Let’s face it, no one enjoys filling out timesheets — yet they are imperative in order to get paid. That’s why Minneapolis ad agency Colle + McVoy has devised a new way to not only get employees to fill out their time cards, but to reward them with some draft beer. Dubbed TapServer, the multi-keg beer deployment system combines RFID tags and some custom-written software to seamlessly sync with the agency’s time-keeping application. On the hardware side, the program is comprised of several Arduino Uno boards, a Node-based server, solenoids and a Raspberry Pi.

A modern-day message in a bottle

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Created by ECAL graduate David Colombini, Attachment is an Arduino Mega-powered poetic machine that enables you to send text, images or videos into the air using a biodegradable balloon with the intention of “rediscovering expectation, the random, and the unexpected” uncommonly found in current means of communication.

Backpack destroys personal data 

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The backpack — which was originally designed as an Art Center College of Design project — intercepts data that’s about to go to the cloud and ‘vaporizes’ it at the same time, creating both a real and symbolic shield. The backpack includes an ‘inhaler’ device that attaches to your hand and triggers it either when someone gets too close to the inhaler’s proximity sensor or when you breathe into it.

Taste the music on the radio

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Can music be translated from something we hear into something we can taste? A group of students believed so, and decided to find out. Beatballs is a project created by 54 students from the Interactive Art Director program at Hyper Island in Stockholm who developed a code that translates specific songs into different meatball recipes based on tempo, cadence, mood, key, and other tuneful attributes. The team also devised a prototype of a machine made with Arduino and recycled objects.

Turning air pollution into art

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Media artist Dmitry Morozov — more commonly known as ::vtol:: — found a way to turn offensive pollution into enticing art through a portable, Bluetooth-connected device entitled Digioxide. In an attempt to raise public awareness of the environmental pollution by artistic means, the Maker’s wireless creation uses a set of sensors to measure the presence of gases such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, methane, and even dust in the air, which are translated into volts. An Arduino algorithmically then converts those volts into various shapes and colors.

Lamp changes color with your mood

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The Mood Lamp is an Arduino-based project created by Italian developer Vittorio Cuculo. The hacked IKEA lamp adjusts its lighting output based on the facial expression of a user.

A shape-shifting, morphing table

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MIT’s Tangible Media Group launched a shapeshifting display that lets users interact with digital information in a tangible way. inFORM is equipped with 900 individually actuated white polystyrene pins that make up the surface in an array of 30 x 30 pixels. The interactive piece can display 3D information in real-time and in a more accurate and interactive manner compared to the flat rendering often created by computer user interface.

A kinetic-audio installation

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In collaboration with FutureEverything and Moscow’s Laboratoria Art & Science Space, media artist Dmitry Morozov has designed a kinetic audio installation that emits quantum entanglement-inspired sounds.

Putting a unique spin on political debates

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This interactive installation by Maker Georgios Cherouvim features a real-life demonstration of a vocal debate between two characters. Instead of a productive dialogue promoting their ideas on a range of issues from voting and local government to war and taxes, the “politicians” share a constant yet indecipherable argument with one another, causing the viewers to lose interest in the conversation and politics all together.

This wireless iPhone charger is a work of art 

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Developed as part of a diploma project by a University of Contemporary Design and Applied Arts (ECAL) student, Spira is a magnetic docking station that wirelessly restores power to an iPhone while turning the device into a decorative wall clock. Utilizing a blend of wood, metal and plastic, the Maker sought to devise an ambient frame that would enable a magnetized iPhone case to hang decoratively on the wall thereby giving it a “place of honor in the home atmosphere.”

Etching graffiti for those in the distant future

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As we look into the future, have you ever considered how you might communicate with your distant offspring — say 50,000 years from now? Well, German artist Lorenz Potthast has. The Maker has created what he calls a “positive vandalism machine,” for communicating with next generations. The Petroglyphomat is a portable, computer-operated milling cutter that can pass along messages by etching them into ancient monuments.

Long exposure photos reveal invisible motions in sports

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Canadian photographer Stephen Orlando has introduced a new way to visualize action sports through the use of LED lights and an Arduino. The technique reveals beautiful light trails, which are not artificially created using applications like Photopshop, and represents the actual paths of familiar objects.

This lamp mimics thunderstorms

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Richard Clarkson has created Cloud, an interactive lamp and speaker system out of an Arduino, fluffy cotton and cloth cord. According to the designer, the installation acts as both a semi-immersive lightning experience — or as a speaker with visual feedback — to mimic a thunderstorm in both appearance and entertainment.

Experiencing the Northern Lights with Arduino

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Many travelers consider the Northern Lights to be a mysterious phenomenon that is nearly impossible to explain to someone unless they have experienced it as well. French graphic designer Bertrand Lanthiez wished to bring that indescribable occurrence to the masses.

Brightening the Japanese waterfront 

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GwaGwa — a creative duo comprised of Makers Masamichi and Kozue Shimada — is known for a number of their innovative installation, hand drawing and stop motion animations. Most recently, the team was commissioned by Smart Illumination Yokohama 2014 to design “Colors of the Wind Way” along the Japanese city’s waterfront.

This talking foundation wants you to drink more H2O

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The Drink Up Fountain, a collaborative project between YesYesNo Interactive Studio and Partnership for a Healthier America, dispenses entertaining greetings intended to encourage everyone to drink more water more often. While the Drink Up device may look like a regular fountain, it sure doesn’t sound like one. When a drinker’s lips touch the water, the Arduino Mega-powered fountain utters phrases like “Refreshing, isn’t it” and “Your feeding one trillion thirsty cells right now,” thereby completing a circuit and activating its built-in speakers. Once the drinker pulls his or her head away from the water, the circuit breaks and the fountain stops talking.

Drawing on glow-in-the-dark surfaces with lasers

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An Instructables user named “ril3y” has devised a slick CNC single point projector that can draw on glow-in-the-dark surfaces with lasers, aptly named Laser Glow Writer. The gadget is driven by Arduino Due, which runs the TinyG CNC motion controller firmware. The SAM3X8E-based board then controls the two stepper motors (X and Y axes) in a coordinated fashion, while turning the small laser on/off. Currently, ril3y is converting SVG images to Gcode, and putting them up on some glow-in-the-dark vinyl.

Wearing your Wi-Fi signal

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Whereas a vast majority of us are in search of Wi-Fi signals on a regular basis, not many have been on a quest to visualize the networks that keep us connected in order to gain a better understanding of these wireless systems. In an attempt to do just that, architect Luis Hernan put together a psychedelic Kirlian Device capable of picking up on Wi-Fi signals and translating them into colored lights. Built around an Arduino and LED lights, the project was tasked with translating Wi-Fi networks into colors — red indicating the strongest signal and blue, the weakest.

A night at the museum — with robots

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For several nights back in August, four robots roamed around London’s Tate Britain, each streaming video to the masses. If it wasn’t cool enough to have bots navigate a museum in the dark, it got even cooler as people from all around the world were able to control their movements right from their computers. Built in collaboration with RAL Space, the nocturnal tour guides each featured an on-board Wi-Fi receiver, an Arduino, a Raspberry Pi unit, lights, sensors, a powerful electric motor, and of course, video streaming technology. The units maneuvered around the grounds using a sonar sensor and a custom 3D-printed enclosure.

Humanoid can drive its own car

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Aldebaran Robotics teamed up with RobotsLab to unveil a NAO robot that was able to autonomously drive a miniature BMW Z4. The vehicle was equipped with an integrated laser range finder linked to an onboard Ardduino, which was responsible for analyzing its surroundings and then relaying steering inputs to the NAO unit in the driver’s seat.

Rewind: Some abstract and awesome Arduino projects from 2014

Atmel powers Arduino. Arduino enables Maker. Maker inspires the world. While there are countless creations all over the web, we’ve compiled just a few of the most dynamic and different ‘duino projects from the past 12 months. Feel free to share some of your favorites as well!

Right on pointé

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Designed by Lesia Trubat, Electronic Traces (E-Traces for short) are a pair of embedded pointé shoes which allow ballerinas to recreate their movements into visual sensations using an accompanying mobile app.


Chameleon-like jacket

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Designed by Oslo, Norway design firm Drap go Design, the Interacket is an ATmega328 powered jacket that lets a wearer interact with the objects around them by mimicking their color.


Click your heels three times and call an Uber ride

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Designed by Maker DJ Saul, Dorothy is a physical trigger that can turn a dumb ol’ shoe smart. Adhering to the “if this, then that” principle, the Ruby is an Arduino-based device equipped with a Bluetooth chip, accelerometer and coin cell battery, while its housing is 3D-printed. The small gadget can be either slipped into or clipped onto any piece of footwear and connected to a smartphone app that will automatically call a cab or send a message.


This talking fridge can sell itself

talkingfridge

Earlier this year in an attempt to provide shoppers with a less intrusive experience, Samsung equipped a number of its refrigerators with Arduino units that were capable of detecting customers and speaking to them in real-time. Whenever movement was sensed by any of the fridge’s interior compartments, the Arduino sensors activated a voice playback and explained the appliance’s features and benefits to the prospective buyer.


When ‘duino found Nemo

fish-on-wheels-by-studio-diip_dezeen_468_4

Dutch design group Studio Diip modded an existing tank with wheels and sensors that would allow its inhabitant to operate the vehicle by swimming in a specific direction. The project, dubbed Fish on Wheels, is an attempt to “liberate fish all over the world.”


Color-changing fabrics react to heat and sound

chromosonic1

Judit Eszter Karpati, a Budapest-based textile designer, wanted to further blur the fading boundaries between the digital realm and physical world. To do so, the Maker created an e-textile that alters its patterns based on its surroundings, which is made possible by an Arduino board, a 12V power supply and nearly 20 custom PCBs. These components control four industrial 24V DC power supplies that are responsible for heating the two moving textile displays — each of which are woven with nichrome wires, screenprinted with thermochromatic dye, and pre-programmed with Karpati’s patterns.


An interactive fabric you’ll want to touch

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Developed by Esteban de la Torre and Judit Eszter Karpati, OCHO TONOS is an audible textile interface for multi-sensorial interaction, involving both touch and sound. According to its creators, the objective of the project was to create a soundscape through sensor technology inviting audiophiles to perform and explore with reactive textile elements. In order to accomplish this feat, EJTech employed an Arduino Mega ADK (ATmega2560).


Re-imagining the radio interface

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Audio broadcasting radios have been around since the 1920s. In fact, their control interface share many similarities — knobs, sliders and switches — with those designed by our ancestors nearly 100 years ago. Now, what if we could re-imagine the entire radio control experience to create a more meaningful relationship between the user and the artifact? Seeking to do just that, Carnegie Mellon University design student Yaakov Lyubetsky has developed a fully-functional prototype of his latest The Experimental Form Radio using an Arduino Uno (ATmega328).


Wake up and smell the coffee

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For a majority of us, mornings just aren’t complete without your daily cup ‘o joe. Now, what if your instant coffee literally woke you up? Earlier this year, Nestlé teamed with Mexcio City-based agency Publicis Mexico and Los Angeles studio NOTlabs to debut the Alarm Cap — a limited-edition, 3D-printed lid powered by an Arduino. The unique design is comprised of seven distinct alarm sounds, including a bird song, that are played in tandem with a gently pulsing light. To switch off the alarm, the user opens the lid and is greeted with the invigorating smell of Nescafé coffee.


This washing machine orders detergent when you’re out

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Cloudwash — designed by the folks at Berg — is a prototype washing machine (based on a standard Zanussi model) connected to a web platform. The team created the futuristic device to explore how the ever-growing Internet of Things would change the appliances most commonly found in our homes, and to discover what new, innovative features would be made possible. With the smart machine, users would be able to remotely program wash loads and even purchase detergent, for instance, all through the touch of a button using its simple companion mobile app. In order to make this a reality, the team modded a Zanussi and intercepted both its connection and system controls by inserting an Arduino Mega (ATmega1280). This would then enable the megaAVR based board to read and write the serial data that was passing to and fro.


A purse that’ll keep you from overspending

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Using an ATmega32U4 MCU based FLORA and a real-time clock, the iBag was designed to physically deter shoppers from accessing their credit cards during their most vulnerable moments. The purse is also equipped with an Adafruit FLORA GPS and LED lights that flash when a shopper gets a bit too close to their favorite stores, or as the company puts it, “danger spending zones.” RFID modules record every swipe of a shopper’s wallet leaving the bag and a GSM module can also send text messages to a responsible other, such as a husband, wife, or parent.


A floating orb captures and replays ambient noise

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The brainchild of designers Francesco Tacchini, Julinka Ebhardt and Will Yates-Johnson, 

Space Replay is a giant ball that constantly records and replays the sounds of public spaces, creating a delayed echo of human activity. To make the floating orb, the Maker trio used a latex balloon filled with enough helium to be able to lift a battery-powered, an Arduino board, an Adafruit Wave Shield and a small speaker.


Samsung is making your bike smarter

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Designed by Italian frame-builder Giovanni Pelizzoli and student Alice Biotti, the Samsung Smart Bike is built around an aluminum frame that boasts curved tubes to soak up vibrations from riding on rough city streets. The frame is also equipped with a battery, an Arduino board, as well as WiFi and Bluetooth modules. Meanwhile, a rearview camera is located between the seat stays of the frame to stream live video feeds to a handlebar-mounted Samsung smartphone.


Designing your own pair of Google Glass

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13-year-old Clay Haight recently designed something not many kids would have even imagined: a Google Glass-inspired, intelligent pair of glasses. The young Maker used the sensors on the Arduino Esplora (ATmega32U4) and an Arduino LCD screen, before piecing it all together on a 3D-printed frame.


This robot wants to add AI to everyday household objects

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Sure, robotic concepts are dime a dozen these days. The question is, however, how close are we to an era of ubiquitous multi-function droids? According to Flower Robotics, soon. The company is envisioning a future where everyday household items, such as lamps and plants, come to life and move freely about our homes. In an effort to lower the barriers for development and adoption of in-house robots, the Tokyo-based design studio recently launched its futuristic device, Patin. Need an extra hand to carry your groceries? A little more light? A reminder to water your plants? To turn up the tunes? Each of these tasks (and more) can be accomplished by the open-source, Arduino-based bot.


Saying ‘I Love You’ with the IoT

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Israeli design student Daniel Sher has developed a trilogy of creations that can transmit silent gestures between loved ones. Using an Arduino for all three devices, the Maker utilized the Internet of Things to establish a new way for loved ones to communicate from afar. With the Atmel based board, the Maker incorporated a series of sensors and wires that allowed various physical traits to be measured and relayed across long distances.


Free beer for your timesheet 

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Let’s face it, no one enjoys filling out timesheets — yet they are imperative in order to get paid. That’s why Minneapolis ad agency Colle + McVoy has devised a new way to not only get employees to fill out their time cards, but to reward them with some draft beer. Dubbed TapServer, the multi-keg beer deployment system combines RFID tags and some custom-written software to seamlessly sync with the agency’s time-keeping application. On the hardware side, the program is comprised of several Arduino Uno (ATmega328) boards, a Node-based server, solenoids and a Raspberry Pi.


TinyScreen is a thumb-sized color display

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With much of the tech community is abuzz about larger screen sizes, the TinyScreen is here to show customers just how adaptable a miniscule display can be in a world overrun by massive screens. The screen itself is only 1.02″ x 0.98″, with a 0.96” viewable area that features 96×64 OLED display and 16-bit color depth. Powered by an ATmega328P, the device is built to be customized and programmed by the clever user base, both novice and expert. The team champions its one-click ability to download new programs and run them with little interuption. Even better, the TinyScreen comes with some incredibly useful programs, such as a clock display, already loaded onto the unit out of the box.


A modern-day message in a bottle

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Created by ECAL graduate David Colombini, Attachment is an ATmega1280 powered poetic machine that enables you to send text, images or videos into the air using a biodegradable balloon with the intention of “rediscovering expectation, the random, and the unexpected” uncommonly found in current means of communication.


A hackable, Wi-Fi-enabled GIF camera

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Oakland-based creative lab Next Thing Co. debuted the OTTO, a smartphone-enabled GIF-making camera that allows users to create GIFs one frame at a time, add image effects, and instantly share their creations on the web. OTTO lets users take photos with a real camera, while still being able to easily share them with their friends, family and other favorite people. Photos taken with OTTO are viewed and shared from your smartphone. By attaching an Arduino-powered FlashyFlash to the USB port hidden under the OTTO logo plug, you can easily add electronics to completely change how OTTO works.


Backpack destroys personal data 

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The backpack — which was originally designed as an Art Center College of Design project — intercepts data that’s about to go to the cloud and ‘vaporizes’ it at the same time, creating both a real and symbolic shield. The backpack includes an ‘inhaler’ device that attaches to your hand and triggers it either when someone gets too close to the inhaler’s proximity sensor or when you breathe into it. An Arduino board then tells a valve inside the backpack to rotate hot water and dry ice and starts a fan that pushes the vapor out. The backpack can be used both to obscure your own data or destroy the data of those around you.


Taste the music on the radio

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Can music be translated from something we hear into something we can taste? A group of students believed so, and decided to find out. Beatballs is a project created by 54 students from the Interactive Art Director program at Hyper Island in Stockholm who developed a code that translates specific songs into different meatball recipes based on tempo, cadence, mood, key, and other tuneful attributes. The team also devised a prototype of a machine made with Arduino and recycled objects.


Turning air pollution into art

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Media artist Dmitry Morozov — more commonly known as ::vtol:: — recently found a way to turn offensive pollution into enticing art through a portable, Bluetooth-connected device entitled Digioxide. In an attempt to raise public awareness of the environmental pollution by artistic means, the Maker’s wireless creation uses a set of sensors to measure the presence of gases such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, methane, and even dust in the air, which are translated into volts. An Arduino algorithmically then converts those volts into the shapes and colors you see below. The interactive project utilizes an Arduino Nano (ATmega328), HC-06 Bluetooth module, gas and dust sensors, as well as an LG mobile printer.


Lamp changes color with your mood

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The Mood Lamp is an Arduino-based project created by Italian developer Vittorio Cuculo. As the name suggests, the hacked IKEA lamp adjusts its lighting output based on the facial expression of a user.


A shape-shifting, morphing table

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Dubbed inFORM, the table is equipped with 900 individually actuated white polystyrene pins that make up the surface in an array of 30 x 30 pixels. The interactive table can display 3D information in real-time and in a more accurate and interactive manner compared to the flat rendering often created by computer user interface. An overhead projector provides visual guidance of the system, with each pin capable of actuating 100mm and exerting a force of up to 1.08 Newtons each. Actuation is achieved via push-pull rods that are utilized to maximize the dense pin arrangement — making the display independent of the size of the actuators. The actuation is achieved by motorized six  slide potentiometers mounted on a custom-designed PBC, driven by an ATmega2560 and TB6612FNGCT-ND motor drivers.


A kinetic-audio installation

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In collaboration with FutureEverything and Moscow’s Laboratoria Art & Science Space, media artist Dmitry Morozov has designed a kinetic audio installation that creates quantum entanglement-inspired sounds. The artwork is comprised of six rotating acrylic discs, each equipped with spinning speakers and microphones. The microphones are connected via computer and the rotary axis to the speakers on the discs. In addition, the installation features an Arduino and a Geiger-Mueller counter that detects the ionizing radiation in the surrounding area. The synchronizing phases of the spinning hardware produces feedback, generating sound when the rotational phases are in sync. These sounds are then processed through digital signal processors, which results in the variations experienced by the viewer.


Putting a unique spin on political debates

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This interactive installation by Maker Georgios Cherouvim features a real-life demonstration of a vocal debate between two characters. Instead of a productive dialogue promoting their ideas on a range of issues from voting and local government to war and taxes, the “politicians” share a constant yet indecipherable argument with one another, causing the viewers to lose interest in the conversation and politics all together. A rather noticeable dissimilarity between the installation, which is aptly named Debate, and an actual politician showdown is that the figures are actually plastic mannequins. Each character is an autonomous and independent unit, powered by a combination of custom electronics and a conversation-simulating program along with an Arduino Uno (ATmega328).


This wireless iPhone charger is a work of art 

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Developed as part of a diploma project by a University of Contemporary Design and Applied Arts (ECAL) student, Spira is a magnetic docking station that wirelessly restores power to an iPhone while turning the device into a decorative wall clock. Described by its creator Alica Robbiani as an interactive picture, charger and clock, Spira was built around an Arduino board and the principle of inductive charging. Utilizing a blend of wood, metal and plastic, the Maker sought to devise an ambient frame that would enable a magnetized iPhone case to hang decoratively on the wall thereby giving it a “place of honor in the home atmosphere.”


Etching graffiti for those in the distant future

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As we look into the future, have you ever considered how you might communicate with your distant offspring — say 50,000 years from now? Well, German artist Lorenz Potthast has. The Maker has created what he calls a “positive vandalism machine,” for communicating with next generations. The Petroglyphomat is a portable, computer-operated milling cutter that can pass along messages by etching them into ancient monuments.


Long exposure photos reveal invisible motions in sports

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Canadian photographer Stephen Orlando has introduced a new way to visualize action sports through the use of LED lights and an Arduino. The technique reveals beautiful light trails, which are not artificially created using applications like Photopshop, and represents the actual paths of familiar objects. Orlando’s long exposure photos turn repetitive, invisible motions seen in outdoor activities such as kayaking, canoeing, tennis, swimming and soccer into enchanted braids of light. Each sport requires the photographer to fine-tune his technique. Orlando’s images use programmable strips of blinking LED lights that are capable of changing colors over time. A custom Arduino-based rig enables him to not only program the color and pattern of the LEDs, but accentuate the movements of whatever activity is being captured. In an exposure of 20 or 30 seconds, for instance, the kayak becomes invisible, yet the trail of light left behind as the kayakers paddle gets picked up and transformed into a vibrant light show.


This lamp mimics thunderstorms

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Richard Clarkson has created Cloud, an interactive lamp and speaker system out of an Arduino, fluffy cotton and cloth cord. According to the designer, the Cloud acts as both a semi-immersive lightning experience — or as a speaker with visual feedback — to mimic a thunderstorm in both appearance and entertainment. The outer fluff is fastened to a styrofoam core that’s embedded with the Arduino, LED lights, a motion detector and other electrical inputs.


Gaming system draws actual blood every time your character bleeds

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It’s no secret that today’s video games are inching closer to bridging the gap between our digital and physical worlds? But, one Maker project may have taken that concept to an entirely new level. What if, when you were injured and lost blood in a game, you lost blood in real life as well? While the premise may sound completely horrific and downright absurd, a pair of former digital advertising creatives are hoping that their latest project, aptly dubbed Blood Sport, will make donating blood more enjoyable. The technology behind Blood Sport is relatively simple. Using a modified game controller, an Arduino and a sharp needle, a player is hooked up to a blood collection system (like the ones typically used during blood drives). A wire is connected from the controller’s “rumble pack” to the blood collection machine via the ATmega328 based board. That way, every time a player’s character is injured and loses blood in the game, the connected controller vibrates and the collection system withdraws blood.


Experiencing the Northern Lights with Arduino

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Many travelers consider the Northern Lights to be a mysterious phenomenon that is nearly impossible to explain to someone unless they have experienced it as well. French graphic designer Bertrand Lanthiez wished to bring that indescribable occurrence to the masses. The Maker traveled to Northern Europe to find inspiration for this illuminating project. He recorded the sights, sounds and happenings throughout his journey. In turn, he created an art installment that would demonstrate the sounds, emotions and visuals that his trip instilled within him. The installation itself focuses on a flat surface sewn with conductive thread, which reveals map of Bertrand’s Northern European trip. Each thread is attached to an Arduino, which scans the touches of the user in real-time. The installation then responds with a series of colors and sounds that recreate the artist’s trek.


Brightening the Japanese waterfront with wind-powered lights

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GwaGwa — a creative duo comprised of Makers Masamichi and Kozue Shimada — is known for a number of their innovative installation, hand drawing and stop motion animations. Most recently, the team was commissioned by Smart Illumination Yokohama 2014 to design “Colors of the Wind Way” along the Japanese city’s waterfront. To bring this vibrant idea to life, GwaGwa apportioned 50 wind-powered lighting devices in a grid across the breakwater, which runs approximately 100m (328 ft) in Yokohama Bay. Each device was embedded with a sensor, a wind power generator, a full-color LED and an ATmega328P MCU, each of which were controlled by an Arduino-based program to visualize the paths. Meanwhile, a stepper motor was installed for the generator unit.


This talking foundation wants you to drink more H2O

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The Drink Up Fountain — recently created by YesYesNo Interactive Studio in collaboration withPartnership for a Healthier America — dispenses entertaining greetings intended to encourage everyone to drink more water more often. While the Drink Up device may look like a regular fountain, it sure doesn’t sound like one. When a drinker’s lips touch the water, the Arduino Mega (ATmega1280) powered fountain utters phrases like “Refreshing, isn’t it” and “Your feeding one trillion thirsty cells right now,” thereby completing a circuit and activating its built-in speakers. Once the drinker pulls his or her head away from the water, the circuit breaks and the fountain stops talking.


Drawing on glow-in-the-dark surfaces with lasers

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An Instructables user named “ril3y” has devised a slick CNC single point projector that can draw on glow-in-the-dark surfaces with lasers, aptly named Laser Glow Writer. The gadget is driven by Arduino Due (Atmel | SMART SAM3X8E), which runs the TinyG CNC motion controller firmware. The SAM3X8E based board then controls the two stepper motors (X and Y axes) in a coordinated fashion, while turning the small laser on/off. Currently, ril3y is converting SVG images to Gcode, and putting them up on some glow-in-the-dark vinyl.


Wearing your Wi-Fi signal

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Whereas a vast majority of us are in search of Wi-Fi signals on a regular basis, not many have been on a quest to visualize the networks that keep us connected in order to gain a better understanding of these wireless systems. In an attempt to do just that, architect Luis Hernan created a psychedelic Kirlian Device capable of picking up on Wi-Fi signals and translating them into colored lights. Built around an Arduino and LED lights, the device was tasked with translating Wi-Fi networks into colors — red indicating the strongest signal and blue, the weakest.


A night at the museum — with robots

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For several nights back in August, four robots roamed around London’s Tate Britain, each streaming video to the masses. If it wasn’t cool enough to have bots navigate a museum in the dark, it got even cooler as people from all around the world were able to control their movements right from their computers. Built in collaboration with RAL Space, the nocturnal tour guides each featured an on-board Wi-Fi receiver, an Arduino, a Raspberry Pi unit, lights, sensors, a powerful electric motor, and of course, video streaming technology. The units maneuvered around the grounds using a sonar sensor and a custom 3D-printed enclosure.


 Humanoid robot drives its own car

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Aldebaran Robotics teamed up with RobotsLab to unveil a NAO robot that was able to autonomously drive a miniature BMW Z4. The vehicle was equipped with an integrated laser range finder linked to an onboard ‘duino, which was responsible for analyzing its surroundings and then relaying steering inputs to the NAO unit in the driver’s seat. In addition, the robot boasted a two-camera computer vision system, a sonar distance sensor, two infrared emitters and receivers, nine tactile and eight pressure sensors.

CNN talks Arduino and open source hardware

As many of you are well aware by now, Atmel can be found at the very heart of most Arduino boards on the market today. Evident by the sheer volume of DIY projects surfacing on sites such as Instructables and Hackaday to Kickstarter and Indiegogo, the open-source platform has become an iconic symbol (not to mention enabler) of the ever-growing Maker Movement.

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The fan-favorite Arduino enables Makers of all levels to create interactive objects that can sense and control the physical world, and subsequently, has made way for a worldwide community of hobbyists, tinkerers and designers to gather around the highly-popular boards. And, Atmel was there from the outset, providing simple yet powerful MCUs for the hardware side of the equation.

Writing for CNN, Peter Shadbolt recently explored the backstory of Arduino, dating back to its origins inside a bar in Ivrea, Italy — coincidentally, the birthplace of Italian technology and home to the world’s first PC.

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“While the company has never recovered its leading position, a humble startup aims to put Ivrea back on the world innovation and design map,” Shadbolt pens.

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“Called Arduino, after the local bar where the five founders met to discuss their project, the company produces simple open-source electronics platforms that allows enthusiasts and professionals to build interactive projects.”

Indeed, as 
Atmel MCU Applications Manager Bob Martin recently noted, our 8- and 32-bit MCUs have been the chips of choice for the Arduino team since the boards first hit the streets for DIY Makers way back in 2005 (as seen in the first prototype below).

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More specifically, our resident Wizard of Make attributes the success of ‘duinos to its easy-to-use, free cross-platform toolchain and its simple do-it-yourself packages with Atmel MCUs. These factors helped initially steer the Arduino team to select 8-bit AVR family MCUs – and today, even some of our Atmel | SMART ARM-based chips as well.

As CNN notes, nearly a decade after Massimo Banzi and his team debuted their first board, more than 700,000 are now in the hands of Makers today, powering everything from drones to 3D printers.

Arduino boards are also extensively used in the educational community, with STEM teachers in secondary schools choosing the versatile platform to teach kids the principles of programming and computational thinking.

Co-founder David Cuartielles told CNN that Arduino is not only an educational tool, but also “a way of exploring new ideas with new people” — a mantra which resonates well with the Maker Faire crowd.

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“It’s been an emerging phenomenon since the late 1990s,” Cuartielles explained to CNN. “Different schools around the world have tried to bring electronics to designers and artists to get them to come up with more creative uses for technology.”

Aside from the countless young Makers turning to its introductory 8-bit boards, it’s no surprise that Arduino has become increasingly popular with well-seasoned designers, architects and engineers as well. After all, they are finding it extremely easy to experiment with conceptual designs and prototypes in a much more cost-effective, efficient manner.

This ease in prototyping has led a number of them to go on and create successful startups, many of which launch crowdfunding campaigns on both Kickstarter and Indiegogo.

“I wouldn’t be risking very much if I said that a lot of the products you see on Kickstarter use Arduino boards in the prototyping phase to control various aspects of the project,” Cuartielles said.

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During his interview, the Arduino co-founder singled out one of the projects in which he finds most interesting: ArduSat. For the first time ever, the open platform mission enabled the general public to run their own space-based applications, games and experiments.

“You will be able to rent a timeslot to manipulate the machine so you can simulate your experiment on land with an Arduino board and you can simulate it in space on the satellite,” he added.

Shadbolt went on to highlight the natural marriage between Arduino and LEGO, both of which are commonly referred to as the Maker Movement’s building blocks.

“Lego is very interesting in a sense that it provides mechanical access to the world. It lets you build almost anything within some constraints — you can’t, for instance, build something that’s perfectly round with Lego. Arduino is at the same level but with electronics. It allows you to control things at a low level really, really well.”

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The interview concludes with a discussion around the development of more sophisticated, complex Arduino boards while maintaining that customary ease-of-use.

“The more simple you make it for the user, the more complex it becomes at the back end,” Cuartilles said. “For example, the Arduino Yún [ATmega32U4] — one of our latest products –basically allows you to connect anything to WiFi or anything to the ethernet.”

Interested in reading more? You can access the entire CNN writeup here. Meanwhile, those looking to kick off their next Arduino-based project may want to check out our comprehensive breakdown of the boards.

And the Simply AVR Design Contest winners are…

Back in March, Atmel launched the second stage of its Simply AVR Design Contest, which encouraged Makers, designers and engineers to develop clever, ground-breaking 8-bit microcontroller-based designs using its highly-popular AVR family. After several months of ideation and submissions, we’re excited to announce that the grand prize winner of the contest is Juan Gonzalez for his IoT ATmega2560-powered robot.

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Programmed with Atmel Studio 6.2, the winning IoT project — which garnered nearly 116,000 votes — runs in three modes including Wi-Fi via an Android application, object-tracking mode and MIMIC mode via TCP/IP.

“Atmel AVR MCUs are simple to use, have a robust ecosystem and are extremely flexible, allowing beginner developers to create innovative, out-of-the-box embedded designs beyond traditional applications,” explained Gonzalez.

“The ATmega-powered IoT robot only took me a couple days to put together and I was thrilled when I was notified. Thank you to the Atmel team for enabling me to showcase my design. I will continue to design with AVR MCUs.”

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In total, five winners were selected through public voting on the contest site and Facebook; meanwhile, a separate Simply AVR Design Contest was conducted in parallel in China. Runner-ups included:

Sumit Grover, Remote and GSM-based home automation system

Savvas-George Kokkinidis-Loungos, Wireless remote car device using hand movements

Shreyas Gite, Arduino-powered medical scanner to measure body temperature and other vitals

Rahul Kar, Digital Soduku solver

“I’d like to congratulate our winners for the Simply AVR Design Contest,” said Sander Arts, Atmel Vice President of Marketing. “With over 300,000 votes for all five winners, there was clearly a lot of enthusiasm for the second phase of the Simply AVR Contest. All these projects showcased creative, impressive designs that demonstrate the simplicity of Atmel’s AVR MCUs which extend beyond the traditional boundaries. With a community of AVR enthusiasts, we are looking forward to the continuation of this program.”

With another successful challenge in the books, we’re eager to see what the future holds for these Makers’ prototypes. Perhaps, they will follow in the footsteps of previous design contest champion Pamungkas Prawisuda Sumasta, who recently launched a Kickstarter campaign for his team’s Phoenard all-in-one prototyping device.

Those wishing to browse through some of the other submitted creations can head over to the contest’s official gallery here.

A Maker’s palette for your next Arduino masterpiece

Every Maker out there probably has an area in their home that is littered with bits and pieces that haven’t found their way to the proper storage container. Searching through a sea of parts makes the prototyping process infinitely more difficult. That’s where the ProtoPalette comes in…

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Karl Alexius and Will Pemble were having organizational issues when working on their respective Atmel based projects. When sharing similar difficulties, they decided to put their brilliant minds together and devise a portable, fully-customizable platform that enables Makers to create their Arduino projects all while keeping the necessary components readily accessible.

“We wanted to build and create with Arduino. But, every time we got started, the confusing mess of parts and pieces stopped us in our tracks,” stated Alexius. “Then it hit me!”

From these brainstorming sessions, the ProtoPalette was born. The device is moldable to any Maker’s desire and can help an innovator test, design and prototype nearly anything they can dream up.

“It takes so much mental energy to organize a simple electronics project that most people quit before they build what they envisioned,” the duo explains. “Because it is difficult – especially for inventor types – to stay focused on their creative vision and get things done, most [Atmel powered] Arduino projects die in a pile of unused, misunderstood components.”

Essentially, ProtoPalette is a large printed circuit board in the shape of an artist’s palette that organizes and makes sense of those Arduino components and sensors lying around. “Making with Arduino, you need one of two things. A bucket of sensors, breadboards, parts and pieces that have to be organized… or a ProtoPalette,” Pemble shares. “For creative inventor types, ProtoPalette lets you focus on your vision instead of keeping things tidy.”

ProtoPalette comes with a plethora of components including pins, boards, motors, buzzers, and sensors that each have their own specified area on the palette; therefore, sorting through each unit is incredibly simple, thus making access to them easy and more intuitive.

Those who attended the recent World Maker Faire in New York may have had the chance to see this nifty design firsthand — where it not only garnered quite the crowd but even an Editor’s Choice Award. During the Faire, our friends at Hackaday dubbed the innovation as “a stylized version of the old ‘parts and springs and wire’ Radio Shack beginner electronic kits.”

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Having already exceeded its original $3,500 goal by nearly $2,000 so far, the ProtoPalette will ideally be shipped to its initial Kickstarter backers in November.

Hitchhiking robot finishes cross-Canada trip

Three weeks and 3,700 miles later, the hitchhiking-robot appropriately named hitchBOT has completed its journey through Canada, having relied entirely on the kindness of strangers and its tablet-and-Arduino brains. The robot’s adventure, which began in Halifax on July 27, ended in Victoria on Saturday.

Despite the journey having taken only 21 days, it has been exhausting expedition, even for a robot. hitchBOT sustained minor injuries including a cracked LED shield protector, and its speech is “a little bit more random than it was at the start of the trip.” Nevertheless, Smith notes, the team was elated to report the robot’s journey went off without any problems and it even made countless friends along the way.

“I’m on a boat,” hitchBOT tweeted Saturday night from a British Columbia ferry with a photo showing some fellow passengers. “I’m on my way,” he shared with followers.

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“We’re elated. It’s been really great fun and to me it seems like it [has] brought people together in a really interesting way,” explained co-creator David Smith, a professor at McMaster University.

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The initial goal of the project, as explained by its creators in a recent news release, was to test how comfortable humans are when traveling with robots, while also seeing how a robot would react to an unpredictable situation. Every 30 minutes or so, hitchBot would snap and send a photo to headquarters and its social media accounts via its 3G wireless connectivity. Based on the photos people have been tweeting and sharing on social media, it appears a vast majority of public have grown to love the adorable fellow. To make picking up hitchBot a bit easier, the gadget came equipped with a car seat attached to its torso so it can be easily strapped to cars and a GPS system so that researchers can track its travels. In addition, it has speech recognition software and can answer simple questions.

Anne Saulnier watches as her husband Brian buckles up the anthropomorphic robot named hitchBOT near Halifax

Trekking coast-to-coast can be a daunting task, and certainly energy draining to say the least. When hitchBOT was running low on battery, it would ask its driver to plug it into an outlet or cigarette lighter within the car. As previously discussed on Bits & Pieces, the hitchhiking gizmo merely consisted of a tablet and Atmel based electronics for a brain, a bucket for a torso, blue swimming-pool noodles for limbs, and a smiling LED panel for a face, which was protected by a cake saver. It wore yellow gloves on its hands and rubber boots on its feet. Together, all the parts set the Makers back only about $1,000; however, the experience of picking up this friendly robot… priceless.

So what’s next for the two-foot-tall bot? Well, unfortunately, robots can’t get driver’s licenses… yet.