Tag Archives: Arduino Uno

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

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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

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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. 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.

Rewind: 30 Maker musical masterpieces from 2014

There’s music making and then there’s making music. From gloves that play tunes to modded printers that blare songs, Makers have proven that just about anything — and we mean everything — can be transformed into sound. And well, as you can tell from our #ThrowbackThursday chippy takes on ‘90s hits, we love music.

Not to mention, a number of musicians have even become advocates of the burgeoning Maker Movement as of late, most notably Sir Mix-A-Lot and will.i.am. For one, the technophile founder of The Black Eyed Peas has offered a ringing endorsement of the DIY culture, recently emphasizing that, “Every young person is going to be inspired to be a Maker from now on. It’s like how everyone used to want to be a musician, an actor, an athlete — but a maker is what people are going to want to be.”

With 2014 coming to a close, we’ve decided to list some of our most favorite and quite impressive musical masterpieces from the last 12 months.


A poncho that literally will help you sing in the rain

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Carnegie Mellon student Liana Kong recently designed a DIY musical rain poncho using an Arduino Uno (ATmega328), FM tuner and flexible speaker. The poncho is capable of controlling the radio in a number of ways, including: hood up/down – power, colorful snaps – different station presets and hood strings – volume.


This obsolete typewriter plays some sweet music

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Maker duo Lasse Munk and Søren Andreasen have created a musical typewriter that transforms ordinary sentences into sound. 

Known as D.O.R.T.H.E (short for Danish Orchestra of Radios Talking and Hacked Engines), the platform is constructed out of old, discarded electronics. In essence,the hacked platform can be thought of as an electronic music box — with each word acting as a pin to create a sound or tone. Every letter on the typewriter is essentially a trigger, as these letters are connected to an Arduino Mega (ATmega1280). The data is then analyzed, where the software then processes and translates it into a musical sequence. More specifically, D.O.R.T.H.E. transforms the number of letters in a word to a certain music pitch, although it is also capable of dealing with basic emotional states such as joy, discomfort, fear and happiness.


Turning chicken nuggets and sushi into music

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While dipping a chicken nugget into sauce or touching sushi may not be the most conventional way to create music, if there is one thing that the ATmega32U4 MCU based MaKey MaKey has taught us, is that nearly anything can be transformed into a MIDI trigger. This includes the tops of cats’ heads, plastic mannequin parts, cacti, rubber finger monsters, and old-school Polaroid cameras, as demonstrated by musician Mark Redito (also known as Spazzkid).  While one would assume that jamming away on some raw fish or dunking a piece of chicken into sweet ’n sour sauce may not produce the most desirable sounds, this performance is anything but.


Piano hack adds another dimension

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A modder by the name of Capricorn1 has added a rockin’ visual dimension to his already impressive musical skills by using a piano’s MIDI output to drive Edison bulbs. Capricorn1 hung the bulbs from a rod of electrical conduit pipe, while threading the wires to a DB25 connector. The lights were controlled by an Arduino Mega (ATmega1280), along with a custom shield and optocoupler to handle zero cross detection.


Cathedral-like sounds packed into a toaster-sized device

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Although it may sound like a pipe organ from St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Maker Matthew Steinke has packed all of those tunes into a 4”x13”x14” MIDI-controlled, portable device. Instead of using pipes and a wind chest typically found in cathedral-esque organs, the toaster-sized device utilizes a combination of electromagnets and steel tines. Impressively, the Tine Organ is capable of producing 20 chromatic notes in full polyphony, starting at middle C, and can be attached to a standard keyboard or a synthesizer smartphone app. An [Atmel based] Arduino unit housed inside the device receives the MIDI input that controls 20 polyphonic software oscillators, which is then sent though a trio of Darlington drivers to the magnets.


 A wearable machine turns tattoos into music

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Moscow-based artist Dmitry Morozov — also known by many as ::vtol:: — has created a unique sound controller to read musical scores implanted in tattoos. The scanning instrument is comprised of a metal railing, hand controllers and parallel black line sensors that move along the arm using a stepper motor. In addition, it is equipped with a Nintendo Wii remote control and an Open Sound Control to enhance the sound possibilities. A stepper motor guides the device along the inked lines, while the length of each bar coincides with the duration of an emitted sound. On the hardware side, key features of the musical creation include an Arduino Nano (ATmega328), a Nord Modular G2, a Symbolic Sound Kyma X, and a six-channel PVC pipe sound system.


Obsolete computer parts turned into marvelous music

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A group of Illinois-based Makers hailing from Makerspace Urbana have unveiled a way to take outdated technology and turn them into pieces of musical instruments. The Electric Waste Orchestra project strives to “manipulate the voltage flowing through circuit boards and use those signals to make music” out of components that would’ve otherwise ended up at the dump. The team transformed an old keyboard number pad, six hard-drives, an [Atmel based] Arduino board and some software into a fully-functioning guitar jamming along with a modular synthesizer.


 A series of stepper motors belt out some Guns N’ Roses

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Sweet Stepper of Mine! Jeremy Weatherford repurposed two stepper motors to play high-tech versions of some of the classics and you have to hear it to believe it. At the core of the Maker’s device sits an Iteaduino MEGA 2560 (ATmega2560) and a series of percussion linkages.


Coffee cups and Arduino unite to make an instrument

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Bonnie Eisenman needed to produce a final project for her electronic music class. So, as a software engineer by trade, the Maker decided to explore her creative side and just like that, the Illumaphone was born. The Illumaphone is a light-based spatial musical instrument that be played by simply waving your arms. Six coffee cups serve as the inputs (aka “light funnels”), with each one keyed to a different pitch. Light levels determine volume and vibrato; as a result, once a cup measures the amount of light, that data is translated into the sound emitted. By moving your hands over a cup, volume and vibrato of a tone are created in relation to the light present. On the hardware side, an Arduino Uno (ATmega328) powers the electronic instrument and receives information from a set of six photo resistors.


Wearable Knitgadget controls your musical devices

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Royal College of Art student Yen Chen Chang recently debuted the Knitgadget, a wearable glove that allows users to control various devices, musical or otherwise. The glove is comprised of conductive yarn that’s 80% polyester and 20% stainless steel (and 100% pure awesomeness). Chang knit and crocheted a series of objects that control devices by rubbing, pulling and stroking. When manipulated, the overlap of the metal fiber causes the textile to change conductivity which is then measured by an Arduino and communicated to the gadgets.


Drumming up some table tunes

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In one of their latest demonstrations of how the ATmega32U4 based Touch Board can be connected to almost anything, the Bare Conductive crew has transformed ordinary items found throughout the kitchen — oranges, a pan, a toaster, a coffee maker, a tea kettle and even some silverware — into sound. Put them together and well, food won’t be the only thing you’re making on the counter!


Making music with the MaKey MaKey Monome

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In an attempt to create a complex musical instrument with inexpensive parts and a simple process, Maker JDeboi has developed one rockin’ device: the MaKey MaKey Monome! As seen at this year’s World Maker Faire, JDeboi utilized the ATmega32U4 powered platform to create a futuristic instrument that looks like it was transported back from the year 2114! Using Makey Makey as its brains, JDeboi implemented a partnership of copper tape, NeoPixels, and cardboard to bring this monome to life. First using the NeoPixels and cardboard, she established an LED lattice that would serve as the base of the project. The Maker recommends using three different colored wires for GND, 5V, and data.


Turning old floppy drives into tunes

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We said a flip flop the flippie the flippie to the flip flip flop a ya dont stop the makin’ of a floppy disk jukebox! Remember that irritating etching noise that aging floppies emitted when they would boot up? Well, Chris Fry has harnessed the sonic power of these old drives and turned them into some musical masterpieces. The Maker blew the dust off of eight floppy drives that he collected and began researching on Instructables how to repurpose them into a programmable musical machine. With the power of an Arduino Uno (ATmega328) and a hefty ATX power supply, Fry had his drives linked up and ready to jam.


These house plants can play tunes when they’re touched

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Inspired by what they saw at a recent Maker Faire, Fast Company’s Natalia Rodriguez and Jihyun Lee hacked some of their typical houseplants to play various musical notes depending how they are grabbed. For example, when someone touches the stem the note is different than when they touch its outer leaves. When grabbed with two fingers instead of one, the sounds are different; same goes for other hand positions. The Makers reproduced a version of Disney’s “Touche,” the technology former Disney researcher Ivan Poupyrev and his team built to encode the frequencies that conductive materials like water, human bodies, and plants, among other materials carry whenever they are touched by a human — using a tutorial from Mads HoBye, Instructables‘ artist-in-residence, who hacked his own version using a small Arduino. While the team aspired to keep things organic and the plants as far from the computer as possible, the team utilized an Arduino Uno (ATmega328) to allow the plants to speak to the computer wirelessly.


DrumPants puts an entire band in your pocket

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Ever catch yourself drumming on your thighs? Your table? Your desk? Your steering wheel? Now, starting a one-man band is as simple as wearing this musical kit. DrumPants, dubbed by its creators as “the world’s industrial quality wearable musical instrument,” transforms your outfit into a full ensemble with 100+ built-in high-quality sounds. DrumPants consists of two wearable sensor strips and a control box (embedded with an Atmel | SMART ARM Cortex-M3-based MCU) that affixes to your attire, allowing you to play a beat by simply tapping your body. The pair of sensor strips can easily be attached and removed from any item of clothing, making it the ideal portable instrument. In addition, the wearable device’s companion app can adjust the tone and pitch of each sound effect and enables users to upload their own customized effects. Wearers even get the functionality of a looping pedal built right into their shoe. The DrumPants kit is designed to work with any app that accepts MIDI or OSC signals, therefore providing users the ability to record, loop and edit their musical masterpieces.


Drawing musical MIDI

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Earlier this year, a team led by Alex Haff of NYU’s Science of Music school debuted a DIY paper circuit project, aptly dubbed “Draw MIDI.” The digital-based platform uses capacitance sensing to collect electrical signals from a pencil-and-paper keyboard. The signals are converted to MIDI with an Arduino Uno (ATmega328) that sends the code to a PC via a Max patch.


A 3D feather touch MIDI keyboard

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The Kyub is a Maker-friendly MIDI keyboard kit that can be easily assembled by just about anyone. Powered by a Teensy 2.0 (ATmega32U4),the open-source device allows users to simply attach one or multiple Kyubs to a computer synthesizer or digital audio workstation for to jam alone, with friends, or even for a full-out composition.


 Drum anything, anywhere and make real music

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Ever catch yourself drumming your pencil or utensil on a tabletop? Thanks to Korg’s ClipHit, you can now bring those rhythmic beats to life. ClipHit’s newly-unveiled concept allows you to take everyday objects and turn them into a portable, electronic percussion instruments by simply attaching the three vibration-sensitive clips to a desk, table or any other nearby surface. Equipped with motion sensors, the clips analyze and monitor how hard you strike an object with a drumstick, pencil or even your fingers, while an embedded sensor in the control unit enables it to be played the same way. A user may also trigger a variety of built-in sound samples — kicks, snare, toms, and cymbals — and select a series of rock, pop or standard drum sets.


 This onesie turns you into a walking MP3 player

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Dutch designer Borre Akkersdijk aspires to usher in a rather unique form of 3D-printed garments: a onesie capable of turning its wearer into a mobile Wi-Fi hotspot. Akkersdijk believes that the current generation of wearable technology — ranging from smartwatches to fitness bands — isn’t so much something you wear as it is something you attach to yourself. His project, named BB.Suit, was created in an effort to turn what calls “carry-able technology” into a much truer wearable form. In doing so, he hopes it would be able to establish a platform where wearers, people around the suit and even those online could all interact with one other in a dynamic, interactive manner. The first version of the suit — which made its debut back at SXSW — featured electrical threads woven into its fabric along with a musical library and GPS system. In collaboration with the online platform 22tracks, musicians around the Austin-based event were able to upload tunes directly onto BB.Suit, giving the term ‘walkman’ an entirely new meaning.


Hacking instruments with nothing but junk

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Maker Yuri Suzuki recently collaborated with South African artists Bogosi Sekhukhuni and Neo Mahlasela, along with creative technologist Nathan Gates, to create a slick musical installation entitled “Warm Leatherette.” Suzuki and Gates devised the set of instruments by using nothing but electronic waste readily found in the streets of downtown Johannesburg — including old cellphones, televisions and cassette tapes. After collecting these obsolete devices, the team went onto upcycle them into a Maker-iffic spread of new musical tools. For instance, Suzuki connected an old TV to an Arduino for an electric drum sound, constructed a keyboard from Nokia phones, and pieced together a cassette tape guitar with variable speeds and sounds.


Move with the music — literally

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A Maker by the name of “BBrodsky” has created an MP3-equipped workout shirt powered by an Arduino LilyPad (ATmega328P), which utilizes the music player and an accelerometer to detect whether or not the wearer is moving. If so, it plays his or her music. According to BBrodsky, the goal of the system is to promote an active lifestyle for wearers.


MIDI drum glove keeps the beat with FLORA



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Designed by Adafruit’s Becky Stern, this MIDI drum glove is powered by the versatile FLORA platform (ATmega32U4). By simply tapping his or her fingers, a wearer can drop a beat like Iggy while looking like Michael.


MIDI dot-matrix printer does the Hackerena (and many more)

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There is no doubt that you remember the inescapable ‘90s hit, The Macarena. The pairing of a catchy beat and a simple dance turned the Los Del Rio smash hit into a national phenomenon. Now, 20 years later, we can reminisce about the tune all thanks to one Maker and his MIDI compatible dot-matrix printer. A hacker by the name of MIDIDesaster has made a habit of turning DMPs into musical devices ranging from an ingenious cover of Eye of the Tiger to Jingle Bells. The modified printer uses an ATmega8 MCU to interpret inbound MIDI data and then feeds the information to an FPGA that essentially tunes the printer.


Play 8-bit chiptunes from your living room sofa

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Ah, chiptune music. Who could forget the iconic synthesized electronic sounds of ’80s gaming? Well now, the Assorted Wires crew is letting your deliver those 8-bit tunes with the Lo-Fi SES, a hackable device. Consider yourself warned though, the open-source instrument will surely spark up some NES nostalgia! Based on an Atmel AVR MCU, the Lo-Fi SES replicates the shape of a good ol’ SNES controller, whose buttons are used to trigger samples, change tempo, as well as play, record and delete tracks. The controller, which is the heart of the Lo-Fi SES experience, comes equipped with a default playlist of onboard sounds including a lo-fi drum set.


Blast your favorite tunes with the Touch Board Boombox

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Our friends over at Bare Conductive recently teamed with Jude Pullen of Design Modelling to develop a trendy boombox that perfectly demonstrates the widespread capabilities of their ATmega32U4 based Touch Board. Comprised of simple cardboard box along with some stenciled on Electric Paint and attached to a Touch Board, the Makers were able to get this stylish creation to flood the streets of London with some of their favorite MP3s.


Drop a beat with this ATmega328 based drum box

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Maker Ole-Birger Neergård has devised a nifty DIY drum machine, the 7-BIT BEAT BOXXX, which is capable of laying the rhythm down for everything from ‘70s funk to modern-day hip-hop tunes. The retro synth-like box’s built-in metronome activates the 7-bit drum samples with every click. In addition, the drum machine is based on an Arduino Uno (ATmega328), encased in a series of mahogany and white acrylic panels. The Lo-Fi drum machine is programmed with nine different (and easily replaceable) 4-second drum samples, as well as features four buttons. The top-left button changes the sounds from three different sample banks, while the other three are responsible for activating the sound bites: big drum on the bottom left, snare on the bottom right, and hi-hat on the top right.


Arduino turntables transform Makers into DJs

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A Swedish designer by the name of Per Holquimst is redefining the use of the old-school turntable. No longer will the instrument solely play music; in fact, his Arduino tangible interface turntable will have you forming beats from scratch in no time! Each machine contains five digital distance sensors in its wooden arm. The instrument can analyze up to 15 different blocks, therefore allowing complex rhythms to be established. These sensors interpret the locations of the blocks and relay that data back through the Atmel based system, making music based on certain pre-programmed metrics. As the user adds a block to the deck, the distance sensor plays a sound; thus, creating a wildly different melody is as simple as moving a block an inch to the left on the rotating wheel.


This installation lets you play city sounds by stepping

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Ever since the days of Tom Hanks playing the giant piano inside FAO Schwartz, we’ve all wanted to step on floor keys and make tunes. Now, what if those “keys” could emit city, pow-wow or drum kit sounds? Thanks to a new audio installation designed by Chelsea Stewart and Eden Lew at the School of Visual Arts Products of Design MFA program, you can! Called “Sound Steps,” the project was designed under the guidance of Adafruit’s Becky Stern as the Maker explored the use of Arduino units in rapid prototyping of new product interactions. Inspired from their recent move from to New York, the duo decided to collect sounds around the city. The sounds were then uploaded to its farm, which consisted of four 1.25’ x 0.75’ x 6’ wood boards, a few extra pieces for an interior bracing as well as MDF material to create the platform top. Sound Steps is comprised of a 9 x 9 fabric square matrix, with each square connected to a Bare Conductive Touch Board (ATmega32U4). The project invites bystanders to walk barefoot across the interactive platform to discover the city audibly.


 Become a conductor of your own air symphony

Created by Ootsidebox’s Jean-Noël, 3Dpad is a sophisticated touchless gesture control interface with a depth perception of 10cm. Based on an AT90USB1286, the slick device is equipped for a wide-range of applications, including artistic expression, a game console, or in this case, an air controller for any electronic instrument.


This embedded ukulele can teach you to play chords and songs

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Designed by Cornell students Raghav Subramaniam and Jeff Tian, ukule-LED is equipped with 16 NeoPixels that are situated along the first four positions of the fretboard. This allows those playing the device to easily learn how to play each chord. All of the 16 LEDs are connected in series to a single pin on the ATmega1284P that sits on a board mounted to the bottom of the ukulele along with power and serial.  ukule-LED has two modes of operations: “Play” and “Practice.” First, in “play” mode, the user can feed the system a song file, a text file that contains the tempo, time signature, and an ordered listing of the chords in a song. The ukulele will then light up the correct chords at the correct times in the song. (Think of it like Guitar Hero.) While in “practice” mode, the user can specify a single chord, which is lit up indefinitely. For those more experienced musicians, the ukule-LED can still serve as an excellent chord reference.

Dr.Duino is like a doctor for your Arduino projects

Dr.Duino — which recently completed a successful Kickstarter campaign — is a fully-equipped breakout board for testing all features of the Arduino platform. Created by Long Island-based Innovative Electronic Solutions LLC, the newly-launched device enables developers using the popular board to have a genuine fixture for testing their Atmel based designs. Think of it as a shield for your shields!

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“Do you love Arduino development but dread testing your hardware because there is no easy way to attach things like your meter, oscilloscope or probes?” asks Guido Bonelli, President and Founder of Innovative Electronic Solutions.

Designed with the hobbyist and DIYer in mind, Dr.Duino features easy access to all pins including ground and source voltages, while a built-in siren with volume control easily identifies high- or low-voltage condition. The Dr.Duino also boasts four push-button switches, which can be be tied to active-high and active-low probes, and provides six 10K potentiometers fed directly into the analog input pins with jumper sockets that are easy to grab and are on standard 0.1-inch centers.

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Bonelli says he invented Dr.Duino because there was nothing on the market like it available for purchase. “I was tired of disassembling my stacked Arduino boards every time I needed to test something which was in between layers.”

Now, users can simply position the Dr.Duino between their shields and utilize the jumper sockets to break the connection between both shields without needing to take apart their stack time and time again.

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The “world’s first test fixture for the Arduino platform” delivers everything a developer needs to debug, troubleshoot and validate their projects quickly and easily. The new device brings every pin on the [Atmel poweredArduino to a header, in addition to providing test points, an onboard RS232 interface, and a pass-through capability that allows test signals to pass to other Arduino board layers or to be intercepted and routed to one of the POTs, switches or LEDs.

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The Dr.Duno’s reset switch offers quick, convenient board restarts. There are four ground points along with four 5.0V and 3.3V test points, all of which are extra-large and color-coded. The device also comes with RS-232 support in addition to Vref, Vin and extra I/O points.

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“The Dr. Duino makes debugging your Arduino projects super fast,” a company rep writes. The unique design of Dr.Duino places all of its testing pins around an open middle which gives an unobstructed view of the board under it; resultantly, making probing of any and all signals easy.

At the moment, Dr.Duino only works with Arduino Uno (ATmega328) and other compatible boards. “Given all of the various vendors providing Arduino boards, there is no way possible to have tested each and every variant,” Bonelli explains.

“If you’ve ever been struck in the middle of the night by your next invention but didn’t have hardware on hand, you can use Dr.Duino and start writing your application code within milliseconds utilizing common hardware needed in almost any design. Just plug your Dr.Duino into an Arduino and start writing code!”

And today, we’ve received word that the Dr.Duino is now available for pre-order! Those interested in learning more can head on over to its official page here.

 

Drop a beat with this ATmega328 based drum box


This box can lay down the track for everything from ‘70s funk to modern-day hip-hop beats.


As part of a final project, Maker Ole-Birger Neergård recently created an ATmega328 powered DIY drum machine — aptly dubbed 7-BIT BEAT BOXXX — capable of laying the rhythm down for everything from ‘70s funk to modern-day hip-hop tunes.

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The retro synth-like box’s built-in metronome activates the 7-bit drum samples with every click. In addition, the drum machine is based on an Arduino Uno (ATmega328), encased in a series of mahogany and white acrylic panels.

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“I had to program the Arduino to include the functions I needed. When all that was ready, I started wondering what would be an interesting way of interacting with this drum machine. I then came up with the idea of a metronome that used drum samples instead of the traditional clicking sounds. I added some buttons too, to make it suitable for the more traditional drum machine users as well,” Neergård writes.

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The Lo-Fi drum machine is programmed with nine different (and easily replaceable) four-second drum samples, and features four buttons. The top-left button changes the sounds from three different sample banks, while the other three are responsible for activating the sound bites: big drum on the bottom left, snare on the bottom right, and hi-hat on the top right.

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What really makes this DIY drum machine stand out is its metronome, or the “tempo selekta” as Neergård has labeled it. Controlling the tempo of the metronome is as simple as adjusting the handle atop that reads both “slow” and “fast.” The metronome then triggers the bass drum and the snare, and creates a drum loop with the two samples.

“This is a very visual and entertaining way of setting the tempo of a track, and I imagine this is ideal if you’re sitting down playing your instrument at home and wish you were accompanied by a drummer,” the Maker adds.

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Aesthetically, Neergård elected to give the drum box a vintage look, which he says was inspired by synthesizer producers such as Robert Moog and Dave Smith. Intrigued? You can listen to the box drop a beat below. Meanwhile, you can learn all about the build by reading its step-by-step log here.

This DIY Star Wars tree is perfect for all Christmas (or Life Day) festivities

Starring Harrison Ford and the trilogy’s original cast, the Star Wars Holiday Special premiered back in 1978. One of the first official Star Wars spin-offs to air, the film has never been rebroadcast or officially released on home video; therefore, the special has become something of a cultural legend, due to the “underground” quality of its existence. The premise of the flick centered round Life Day (a Wookiee holiday similar to Christmas), where Chewbacca — accompanied by Han Solo, of course — is headed home to see his family. Along the way, the duo are chased by two Star Destroyers, but they escape into hyperspace.

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Well, for those Star Wars fans unable to ever catch the holiday film, you can still celebrate the season with one Maker’s impressive themed Christmas “tree.” Comprised of redwood and plywood shelves mounted to the wall in a tree-like structure, Darbin Orvar’s decorative piece is powered by an Arduino Uno (ATmega328) and several strips of LED lights programmed to play Darth Vader’s infamous theme song.

As Orvar points out, the tree is surely an ideal Christmas centerpiece for any die-hard Star Wars fan in their home, apartment, or even inside their office — where you may not want an actual tree yet still looking for a little holiday cheer.

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“You can go simple or complex with the design here, but I chose to go pretty simple with some this redwood shelves for branches and LED strip lights for typical Christmas lights,” the Maker writes.

While this DIY project’s lighting is programmed to sync with Darth Vader’s theme, Makers can go ahead and create any sequence they’d like.

To create each circuit, Orvar used a TIP31 transistor. From the base, she connected a 1k ohm resistor to the pin of the Arduino, grounded the emitter and connected the collector to the negative of the LED, while giving the red lead a 12V power supply. The Maker does note that “the power on the Arduino is not great enough to power the LED alone, so you must use something with more power, like a battery.”

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Interested in an ATmega328 based Star Wars tree for yourself? Head over to the project’s official page for a step-by-step breakdown. May the force be with you this holiday season!

10 smart umbrellas for rainy days

When it rains, it pours… well, at least here in California. As we brace for high winds and flash floods, we figured what better time to compile a list of some of the most innovative umbrellas to keep us dry. At the heart of Silicon Valley, it would only make sense that they’d be high-tech as well, right? While the invention of the umbrella dates back well over 3,000 years ago, it would appear that not a whole lot has changed in its basic design. That was until now…

The “Invisible” Umbrella

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Instead of those awkward metal poles and canopies, a team of Chinese designers is relying on a “force field” of air to keep you nice and dry. The Air Umbrella recently completed a successful Kickstarter campaign, garnering over $102,000.

The “Forecasting” Umbrella

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What if your umbrella had a handle that would illuminate when snow or rain was in the forecast? Never forget to grab it on your way out the door again thanks to the Ambient Forecasting Umbrella! The enchanted accessory works by tuning in to AccuWeather.com to predict the weather in your area, and if there happens to be 100% chance of precipitation, it will pulse nearly 100 times.

The “Light Sabering” Umbrella

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Star Wars fans, does it get any better than this?

The “Traceable Umbrella

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High-end umbrella maker Blunt recently teamed up with Bluetooth-tracker specialists Tile to create what the company calls, the first smart umbrella. Thanks to what may very well be the first location-aware ‘brella, if lost, all you need to do whip out your iPhone and launch the Tile app to track it down. As you close in on its whereabouts, the umbrella will play a tune so you can find with both your eyes and ears!

The “Web Browsing” Umbrella

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What if you could snap a pic, capture a video, or browse the Internet using just your umbrella? That’s what Makers Sho Hashimoto, Shingo Iwata, and Takashi Matsumoto aspired to bring to reality with the Pileus. Described by its creators as a connected umbrella to make “walking on rainy days fun,” the accessory is equipped with a large screen, a built-in camera, a motion sensor, GPS and a digital compass.

The “Sensing” Umbrella

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What if your umbrella could help protect the world from air pollution while it protected you from rain? Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design students Saurabh Datta, Akarsh Sanghi, and Simon Herzog recently debuted an umbrella capable of just that. Appropriately dubbed “Sensing Umbrella,” the ATmega32U4 based device has the ability to collect air pollution data during a nice stroll through the park or en route to work.

The “Gauging” Umbrella

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Dutch researcher Rolf Hut has developed a way to transform ordinary umbrellas into mobile weather-monitoring stations using the sound of raindrops. By using an fitting an umbrella with an acoustic rain gauge, the prototype detects droplets falling on its canopy, and uses Bluetooth to relay this information via its smartphone app. As people walk around with umbrellas throughout a city during a storm, each app can transmit data to the “cloud” (pun intended) which meteorologists could use to devise more precise predictions.

The “Sharing” Umbrella

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Have you ever been caught running your weekend errands as a sudden April shower crops up? Without warning, your clothes, new purchases and hair become soaked. Lucky for you, the Umbrella Here has arrived to solve all of these problems! The creators of the project — who recently completed a Kickstarter campaign — are looking to “bring strangers together” on these rainy days with a smart light that affixes to the top of your umbrella.

The “Glowing” FLORAbrella

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Thanks to our friends at Adafruit, you can now bring along your own rainbow on a rainy day with this LED-embedded, FLORA (ATmega32U4) powered umbrella — aptly dubbed FLORAbrella.

The “Enlightening” Umbrella

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Once upon a time, there were two who girls sincerely enjoyed strolls in the rain with their umbrellas. So much so that they decided the enjoyment of this experience could be maximized by creating their own pressure-activated web of LEDs to install under their umbrella. With the help of an Arduino Uno (ATmega328), some 4051 multiplexers, wires and soldering, the idea was brought to life light!

This audio-visual installation puts a unique spin on debates

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.

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As demonstrated in the video below, the scene isn’t too far off from your typical political debate, except for the obvious fact that the figures have giant, flashing, geometric heads and only converse through robotic beeps and bloops.

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A rather noticeable dissimilarity between the installation and an actual politician debate 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).

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Aside from a series of RGB LED strips, the custom-built circuit board acts as an audio filter to detect a specific audio frequency, which is picked up by its built-in microphone while the tones are transmitted through the mannequin’s speakers.

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The ongoing act is performed in non-deterministic fashion, with each spokesman waiting for a short moment of silence to once again resume speaking. Within a short period of time, the other unit has a chance to intervene. In the event both figures accidentally begin talking together, one stops. If one talks for way too long, the other starts talking as well and as no-one gives up, they talk on top of each other and turn red.

Intrigued like we think you may be? You can head on over to Cherouvim’s official project page here. In the meantime, watch the debate unfold below!

Maker 3D prints a laser engraving machine

Electrical engineering student Tyler Alford has successfully 3D-printed a laser engraving machine. No stranger to printing and constructing 3D printing devices like the ATmega1284P based RepRapPro Huxley, curiosity eventually led the young Maker to think outside the box.

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“It started out just being bored on summer break from university. I had recently finished a project that required custom PCBs and was interested in ways to make my own,” Alford tells 3DPrint.com

Instead of simply 3D printing yet another printer, Alford elected to set his sights a little higher — this time on a fully-functioning laser engraver. The frame was devised using a modified Rostock Mini Pro. While he had originally began his project with ABS, Alford reveals that he found that it “warped too much.” Subsequently, he later turned to MatterHackers’ PLA Pro material, which was a much better fit for the job. When all was said and done, the entire frame took just six hours to complete.

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In an effort to keep his build as easy and cost-effective as possible, he relied upon two axes — one responsible for holding the laser, the other holding the plate. Powered by an Arduino Uno (ATmega328), Alford reveals that he was able to acquire two EasyDriver stepper motors and a laser housing on eBay for less than $10.

Since the laser, which he had pulled out of an old DVD drive, drew more power than the ATmega328 based ‘duino could supply, the Maker needed to put it on an LM317 based isolated circuit.

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“In the end the entire project only ended up costing me about $15 as I already had the Arduino and DVD drives, and I pulled the laser diode from one of the DVD drives,” Alford concluded.

Want to delve deeper into the build? The Maker has made his project available on Thingiverse.

3D print your very own working Stargate

While it may not be able to create an actual wormhole just yet, one Maker recently devised her own 3D-printed, Arduino-powered Stargate that actually dials.

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Cara McNab brought the project to brought to life using an AT90USB1286 powered Printrbot Simple Metal 3D printer extruding gray (and some transparent ) PLA materials, before adding a stepper motor to drive the inner ring and 5mm NeoPixels to light up the chevrons. To round out the build, the DIY Stargate is controlled by an Arduino Uno (ATmega328) along with an Adafruit Motor Shield that uses a customized Arduino sketch.

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“The gear was modified to snugly fit onto the stepper motor, and added a hole through which the stepper motor could be tightened to its mount,” McNab notes. “I combined some parts that were 2 pieces into one piece so that the build required less gluing and was structurally stronger.”

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The entire creation measures just over 16 inches wide, making it a suitable decoration for any diehard Stargate fan — or for those with some serious intergalactic travel aspirations.

Intrigued? Well, travel on over to the project’s official page on Thingiverse here. You may also get a kick out of this ATmega2560 based DIY wormhole actualization machine as well.

Hacking an IKEA lamp into your own Death Star

Over the years, IKEA has become quite synonymous with do-it-yourself home goods. That is why it’s no surprise that IKEA hacks — like a recent Death Star-inspired pendant lamp from David Bliss — have become a bona fide design category all on its own that has gained widespread adoption throughout the Maker community.

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Nurun founder David Bliss recently modded an IKEA PS 2014 lamp using an Arduino Uno (ATmega328), an Arduino Motor Shield, a linear stepper motor, NeoPixel LEDs, as well as the SmartThings platform to control the lights.

“I replaced the standard wiring with a Cat5 ethernet cable to connect my electronics in that cap to the motor and LEDs in the body of the lamp. Four of the Cat5 wires are used to control the motor and three for the LEDs, leaving one unused wire,” Bliss writes.

The Maker then affixed the motor using a standard mounting plate and a fiberboard bridge attached to the central spine of the lamp. As for driving the motor, Bliss says it was rather simple once locating a shield that could power it properly. For this, he turned to Arduino.

“Given the design of the lamp and the need to work around the motor’s position, I wanted to use the larger 60 LED ring configuration. Unfortunately, the rings could not fit in any one location when the lamp’s arms were both extended and contracted. Luckily, each 60 LED rings is actually made of four 1/4 circle arcs. I ended up using two sets of three arcs in triangular configurations (one triangle facing down and one facing up).”

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Bliss then went on to add a 24 LED ring to the top of the lamp to not only enhance its brightness, but to fill some of the shadows casted on the ceiling by the internal LEDs.

The lamp is powered by a pair of 5V supplies. The first is a 2 amp supply used for the [ATmega328 based] Arduino and the motor plugged into the Arduino’s barrel jack, while the second is a 10 amp supply connected to the LEDs.

Surely enough, the lamp can be turned on/off from a standard wall switch, making it an awesome addition to any dorm or bedroom. Interested in hacking a Death Star lamp of your own? Head over to the project’s step-by-step breakdown here.