Tag Archives: ATmega328P

Wear your heart on your sleeve with the Beatband


This blinking wearable device combines a pulse sensor with a DIY Arduino.


As showcased on MAKE MagazineMakerBlock has devised a simple pulse-blinking indicator that enables a user to display their heartbeat when performing nearly any activity imaginable using a DIY Arduino microcontroller.

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With the implementation of a MintDuino (ATmega328P + Arduino bootloader), MakerBlock has tasked a pulse sensor to trigger a set of green glowing LEDs. The entire unit fits within a mint tin (hence its name) and can be easily slipped into a specified sleeve for comfortable wearing.

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Many would assume a neoprene sleeve would be ideal for this project, but MakerBlock recommends the NXE ActiveSleeve which is comprised of a stretchy material that allows the blinking lights to shine through. What good is an LED pulse display if onlookers can’t see your beating heart, right?

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MakerBlock writes about a minor change to the MintDuino, “For this build we want to transfer it to perfboard so it’ll fit snugly in the mint tin and the armband sleeve.” Its creators go on to caution fellow Makers, “Don’t solder the green LED to the perfboard. You’ll replace this component with jumper wires connecting to your 5 red LEDs on the lid.”

Once soldered, wired and worn, this project has a multitude of uses. It can provide a visual representation of your feelings while working out, watching a movie, or even meditating. Now, go show off those emotions!

These 3D-printed Easter eggs will hide themselves


Get ready for the Internet of Eggs.


While going on the hunt for colorful Easter eggs typically filled with chocolate, jelly beans and sometimes even cash may be fun, Guido Burger has decided to bring the age-old game into the Internet of Things era. The Maker has crafted self-hiding, 3D-printed eggs using Platinchen (or blueIOT), a platform that combines both a certified BLE module along with an ATmega328P MCU.

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The beacons bring a variety of exciting new features to the egg hunt, including proximity detection (which senses when someone is nearby and takes action) and retrieval avoidance (which allows them to emit sound and hide themselves).

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Each unit features a 9-axis, absolute orientation sensor that is used to detect motion, allowing it to change color and make noise when touched. Burger also implemented an Adafruit vibrating mini motor disc and controller to enable unique movements of the eggs while out in the yard or scattered throughout the house.

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What’s more, the devices are entirely open-source, meaning Makers can add their own ideas to it as well. And yes, there’s still room to hide a few treats inside its 3D-printed shell.

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Interested in this eggs-ellent idea? Head over to Hackster.io for a complete step-by-step breakdown of the build.

Creating a see-through Arduino with an ATmega328P


CIT is hoping to put the ‘printed’ back into printed circuit boards.


CIT Technology is a manufacturer of digitally printed flexible electronic circuits. The crew is on a mission to develop low-cost, flexible circuits that will spur the imagination of the next generation of designers. In doing so, they aspire to put the ‘printed’ back into printed circuit boards by using a unique two-stage additive print-and-plate process that deposits solid copper onto low-cost flexible substrates. Building a board on these materials can have some significant advantages over conventionally manufactured PCBs.

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If you follow along with our (*cough industry-leading cough*) Twitter account, then you saw how well the audience received CIT’s recent tweet of a see-through Arduino. Created as an example of a module built on low-cost PET, the ‘duino featured 50 micron clear PET and was based on an ATmega328P MCU, enabling it to be linked to other modules to devise entire systems.

“Our see-through Arduino was made to show how quick and simple it is to create your own modules, either as one-offs or in volume,” the team notes.

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As part of this project, CIT also made a Bluetooth LE module, a capacitive touchpad set and LED indicator modules. By piecing these components together, you will have all the elements required to construct a Bluetooth widget – what that widget does is entirely up to you.

“This is where we can help you create the next module by printing the designs on PET. The flex circuits are printed on clear or white PET from 50 to 125 microns thick. The tracks are copper so you can solder SMT devices to the tracks using low temperature Tin Bismuth solder.”

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PET flexible circuits open up interesting options when it comes to low-cost sensors for lightweight applications, including drones where every gram counts. And of course, these circuits can be folded into awkward shapes.

CIT first began crafting these modules as a sort of “educational” process so that they could document the steps when evolving a modular project to a final dedicated circuit and show how current digital printing processes are now mainstream. Today, the company can print flexible PCBs by the kilometer, and given that the process is completely digital, there are no masks or expensive tooling involved in the setup.

Intrigued? Head over to CIT’s official page here.

This ATmega328P position-reporting board can track high-altitude balloons


The ArduinoTrack flight controller uses the APRS network to report location data. 


High-altitude balloons are unmanned, helium or hydrogen-filled balloons that are released into the stratosphere, generally ascending to heights between 60,000 to 120,000 feet. While the most common ones are deployed to monitor weather, they are often used as a platform for experiments in the upper atmosphere as well. Modern apparatuses generally contain electronic equipment like radio transmitters, cameras or satellite navigation systems that relay data. However, what if you wanted a way to track your balloon without sending that data over a cellular network?

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That’s exactly what Zack Clobes and the team behind the Project: Traveler project set out to accomplish with their position-reporting board that uses the Automatic Packet Reporting System (APRS) network to report location data, all while easily fitting on an Arduino in the form of a shield.

The Project: Traveler group has been using the aptly-named ArduinoTrack flight controller in one form or another since 2010. After successfully completing eight flights on the platform, its creators believe it is ready for release to the public.

The shield hardware is based on an ATmega328P along with an LMV324M rail-to-rail operational amplifier, a Telit Jupiter SL869 GNS Version 002 GPS module, and an optional RadioMetrix HX1 VHF transmitter. All it requires to report position data is a small antenna and a battery. In addition, the ArduinoTrack Configurator allows a user to adjust the settings which are stored in non-volatile EEPROM.

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For those unfamiliar with the network, APRS is an amateur radio-based system for real-time sending of data packets in a local area. Devices using APRS can transmit a wide-range of information including GPS, text messages, weather reports, radio telemetry, and signal direction finding should GPS not be available. As our friends at Hackaday note, the project can also act as a shield as well, meaning that more data lines are available for tasks like monitoring sensors and driving servos.

Want to learn more? Fly over to the project’s official page here.

Plant Friends is an AVR based plant environmental monitor system


These bamboo characters will become friends with your plants. 


Have you ever wanted to know the exact moment that your precious plants get thirsty? A Maker by the name of Dickson Chow has created an environmental monitor system called Plant Friends that will tell you just that.

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The environment monitoring solution is comprised of two sub-systems: wireless sensor nodes in the form of cute, laser-cut bamboo characters and a base station. The adorable bunny, robot and dinosaur nodes monitor soil moisture, air temperature and humidity of your indoor plants, and will alert you via email or SMS when they are in need of a drink. Aside from these notifications, Chow envisions his Plant Friends having the ability to:

  • Monitor multiple plants.
  • Run on batteries.
  • Be low power, maybe having to swap each battery every 4-6 months.
  • Include an Android app.
  • Come with little to no maintenance.
  • Have an enclosure to organize and protect the electronics.

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To accomplish this, Chow embedded each bamboo character with an open-soure Moteino dev board (ATmega328P) along with sensors (moisture, humidity and temperature), an indicator LED light and a battery meter. The Maker says he elected to use Moteino instead of the Arduino Uno as the clone comes with an optional radio transceiver, which enables the Plant Friends to transmit and receive data wirelessly.

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Each character is assigned to an individual plant. Information such as temperature, humidity and soil moisture is collected by the sensor, and sent over to the base station via its transceiver. The hub houses another Moteino that acts as a gateway to receive the RF signals, a USB Wi-Fi adapter, and a Raspberry Pi where the data is stored in a MySQL database. The information is then analyzed and displayed on an accompanying Android app. This allows any plant-grower to look at real-time and historical data right on their phone.

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Prone to dying plants? With spring officially here, you may want to check out Plant Friends.

Lumious lamp is bringing the sun inside your house


This lamp is redefining the way you interact with artificial light.


A new lamp that has launched on Indiegogo is looking to give you the experience of placing a window where you’re unable to have one, or as the Pittsburgh-based team put its, “offer brilliant sky-scales that model a clear sunny day in July, everyday.” This allows you to enjoy bright orange sunrises, brilliant noon sun, and even rich red sunsets, all indoors.

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Interactive smart lamps aren’t anything entirely new, as we’ve seen everything from ones capable of mimicking a thunderstorm to helping you to feel energized and relaxed at home. However, the Lumious lamp is looking to do something a bit different: to bring the sun inside. Designed by Lumilabs, the wall-adorned accessory works by slowly changing throughout day to give your body a sense of rhythm via color-changing LEDs.

Taking advantage of the biological relationship between brain function and specific light wavelengths, the lamp helps you stay alert and focused as the day goes on, opposed to constant fluorescent sameness that can lead to headaches and disorientation, among other things.

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“We are focused on what kind of lighting is good for our biology. We believe that lighting should not only enable us to see, but improve our mood and productivity,” the team explains.

Based on an ATmega328P, its unique capability is accomplished using an internal timer, combined with the altering of the light’s hue, brightness and angle to coincide with the real sun outside.

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Lumious will surely be something that’ll come in handy for New Englanders that lose all that vitamin D over the winter, or for those residing in the Pacific Northwest during its rainy season. Not to mention, the device will let shift workers easily adjust the lamp to better match their personal schedules. Interested? Head over to the project’s official Indiegogo page, where Lumilabs is currently seeking $10,000. If all goes to plan, shipment is expected to begin later this year.

An Arduino At Heart prototyping board you can DIY


NEWTC lets Makers assemble and solder their own Arduino Uno-like prototyping board.


Recently launched by our friends at Arduino, the Arduino At Heart program is specifically designed for Makers and companies with products based on the open-source board that would like to be clearly identified as supporters of the versatile platform. The program is currently available for any device that includes a processor that is currently supported by the Arduino Development environment, including the following Atmel microcontrollers (MCUs):

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Joining a number of other boards such as Bare Conductive’s Touch Board and ReadBearLab’s Blend Micro, NEWTC has become the latest member of the family with a set of new ATmega328P based products. The Arduino Uno-like Prototyping Board by NEWTC comes in a variety of models: DIY version that requires assembly and soldering, an assembled version ready for use out-of-the-box, as well as a USB to Serial uploader.

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Interested in learning more about the Prototyping Board? Head over to NEWTC’s official page here.

LyteShot wants to take mobile games out into the real world 


Finally, a new mobile gaming system that requires more than just your thumb. 


When it comes to gaming, Mark Ladd and Tom Ketola envisioned something entirely different than just sitting on a couch or inside a dorm room. The Maker duo, who together lead the team behind LyteShot, have developed a reality gaming alternative that converges modern-day technology with old-school outdoor fun.

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The ATmega328P based platform is comprised of a wireless device and sensor that essentially acts in laser tag-like fashion. Both the Lyter and LytePuck, respectively, are equipped with IR transmitters/receivers, Bluetooth Low Energy, accelerometer, HUD navigation controls, along with vibration motors and LEDs to show in-game data. The handheld gadget is customizable with a series of peripherals that enable a player to transform it into a gun, wand, staff, sword, bow or just about anything else through 3D printing, making it ideal for a wide-range of role-playing and first-person shooter games, interactive capture the flag, scavenger hunts, and adventures with complex story-lines.

“Asking if LyteShot is different than laser tag is a lot like asking if Xbox is different than Halo. LyteShot is a platform, first and foremost, and one that supports a wide range of games. The LyteShot platform can not only support a game of laser tag (easy!) but also provide for the creation of an entire library of live-action games from thrilling spy games to tower-defense games, and from Alternate Reality Games (ARG) games to fantasy RPGs,” Ladd writes.

How it works is relatively simple. The Lyter and LytePuck sensor connect with your mobile device to transmit game data to other players via the cloud. Point the device at another player/object and click the trigger. For instance, if the person wearing one of the sensors is “hit,” the blow will be registered in the point system for whatever game is being played. Once the LytePuck receives a command, it reacts by lighting up or vibrating, alerting the player who is sporting the LytePuck to the in-game response. This command is then sent instantaneously through the cloud to all the participants’ mobile devices, alerting everyone with up-to-date, real-time information and messages.

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“For gamers of all kinds, LyteShot provides cloud-based wireless technology that enables instant shared data. Players can use real-time tracking of game logistics, leaderboards, hit detection, geo-tracking, quest completion, in-game communication, and more to provide an immersive and socially driven experience. Gamers will no longer need a referee or gamemaster to play. LyteShot digitally tracks all game stats, enforces all boundaries, guides the storyline and more – instantaneously.”

LyteShot is in the process of making a number of games available on its open platform. Among them are Assassin (a live-action game where participants aim to eliminate each other), Besieged (a medieval fantasy digital territory capture game), and Invasion (a game played against the computer in which players “battle a swarm of viruses taking over the planet”).

Using its open-source SDK, Makers and developers alike have the unique ability to create the next generation of augmented reality gaming, including a heads-up display app. In fact, LyteShot is already working with Epson to integrate the system with its Moverio BT-200 smart glasses. Through LyteShot’s Arduino (ATmega328P) powered hardware platform, there are endless possibilities of what can be created, ranging from virtual grenades to claymores to the use of drones. In the near future, the team even plans to launch a marketplace where users can share their gadgets and code.

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Are you ready to put those thumbs to rest and take mobile gaming outside? If so, hurry on over to the team’s Kickstarter page, where they are currently seeking $168,534.

Rewind: 14 pocket-sized projects of 2014

And who said big things can’t come in small packages?


A CD-sized printer you can take anywhere

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Think printing is boring? Tedious? Annoying? You may want to check those thoughts at the door after checking out this portable, handheld printer from a team of students from Lev, the Jerusalem College of Technology. The young Makers — who together launched ZUta Labs — have debuted a revolutionary little gadget. The appropriately named Pocket Printer is an untethered robot comparable in size to a CD case that features a set of omni wheels and a printer cartridge tethered to an [Atmel based] Arduino board. Once placed down, the device begins to run along the paper, using its aforementioned wheels and a high-res optical sensor to move around, distributing ink wherever it’s needed. For multi-paged documents, simply pick up the printer and put it onto the the next blank sheet of paper.


A drone that can fold up into your front pocket

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Developed by Maker Jason Lam along with his team at San-Francisco based AeriCam, the Anura is a flying quadcopter that can be folded into approximately the size of an iPhone 6. The portable drone connects with iOS and Android smartphones via Wi-Fi. Equipped with a built-in microcamera, Anura offers a live aerial view on the screen of the connected smartphone, which also serves as its remote control. In addition, the flying apparatus can soar within a range of 80-feet with a flight time of around 10 minutes per charge and a top speed of 25 MPH. The pocket-sized UAV hopes to pack some other functionalities as well, including auto take-off, auto land, return home and follow phone.


An entire band in your pants

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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. As seen on Kickstarter and ABC’s Shark Tank, DrumPants transform one’s trousers into a full ensemble with 100+ built-in high-quality sounds. Though the DrumPants were designed with music in mind, the sensors do provide additional uses — they can reprogrammed to trigger actions within a wide variety of apps, ranging from answering their phone, to playing a streaming video, to controlling a game. In addition, its control box is powered by an Atmel | SMART ARM Cortex-M3-based MCU and features an ultra-low latency Bluetooth 4.0 chip, an embedded sound engine for 1/8-inch headphone jack, 128 instrument sample banks and a Micro-USB for connection to a laptop or PC.


A Tetris-playing business card



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Safe to say, you’ve never seen a business card like this before. Created by Maker Kevin Bates, Arduboy is an uber-mini handheld game console powered by an ATmega328P. The device, which is roughly a millimeter and a half thick and apparently packs nearly 10 hours of battery life, is equipped with a 1.3″ OLED display, capacitive touch buttons and a piezo-electric speaker. In essence, it is a digital business card which features a built-in Tetris (and Pokemon) game and several control buttons.


An open-source offline password keeper

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In the wake of recent breaches, the need for two-factor authentication is more apparent than ever before. And, while log-ins and passwords are critical elements required to access the sites and services we use on a daily basis, remembering complex credentials can be quite difficult. So, in an effort to minimize the number of ways a password could be compromised, the Hackaday community recently devised an offline password keeper called Mooltipass. The crew selected an ATmega32U4 MCU to power the device, which also boasts an easy-to-read OLED screen, a read-protected smart card (AT88SC102) and Flash memory to store encrypted passwords.


A portable breathalyzer that has your BAC

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Developed by the team at Edge Tech Labs, DrinkMate is a lipstick-sized breathalyzer that plugs directly into your smartphone. The project recently completed a successful Kickstarter campaign, where it garnered well over its original $40,000 goal. Unlike those of the past, the world’s smallest breathalyzer — which measures 1.8″ long x 0.62″ in diameter — works in conjunction with the Android phone’s app and displays his or her blood alcohol content (BAC) results instantly with no calibration, no mouthpiece and no battery. A user simply inserts one end of Atmel based DrinkMate into a phone’s microUSB port, while blowing into the other end. BAC results are then displayed instantly.


A Polaroid printer for your smartphone

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Have you ever browsed through your smartphone pics and wished you could print copies in a moment’s notice? A new device, aptly named SnapJet, is now making that a reality. The open-source, instant-film printer uses Polaroid technology to let users wirelessly print their photos directly from a smartphone. Impressively, the SnapJet doesn’t require any mobile app, wires, or other connections, such as Wi-Fi, NFC or even Bluetooth. Driven by an AT90USB1286, the SnapJet also features an OLED display and other connectivity options — like USB and BLE — just in case you feel the need retouch a few pics, or for those Makers out there, the urge to reprogram or hack the open-source device.


A handheld air quality monitor

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Designed by the Brooklyn-based HabitatMap team, AirBeam is a portable, palm-sized system for mapping, graphing and crowdsourcing air pollution in real-time as you make your way around city streets. While the wearable instrument may not purify the air, it does enable you to monitor what you are breathing in, thereby increasing your awareness of the budding issue. As its creators note, pollution is among the leading causes of chronic illnesses as well as contributor to a number of terminal illnesses. In an effort to share and improve the atmosphere, the ATmega32U4 based AirBeam uses a light scattering method to take regular measurements of fine particular matter (also known as PM2.5), convert the data into a more digestible form and relay it to its companion smartphone app via Bluetooth. The Android app then maps and logs the data in real-time.


A tracker for your environment

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Wearables? More like air-ables! While a majority of the wearable tech space has been focused on tracking what’s inside our bodies such as activity and stress levels, a new kind of device is emerging, one in which monitors what’s going on outside of us — specifically in our environment. Similar to the aforementioned AirBeam handset, TZOA is capable of measuring air pollution and UV exposure in one’s immediate environment using advanced sensor technology. The tiny, round tracker is equipped with optical laser sensors that keep tabs on air quality, UV light, humidity, and temperature — all of which transmit data to a companion smartphone app via Bluetooth to quantify the environment around the wearer. Using this information, the wearer can determine whether they need to open a window, step outside to catch a few rays, or simply take a different route on their way to the office.


An all-in-one prototyping gadget

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Fresh of a successful crowdfunding campaign, Makers Pamungkas Prawisuda Sumasta and Ralf Smit have created the first all-in-one Arduino-compatible prototyping gadget. While its form-factor is rather convenient, its hackability and wide-range of applications is where the so-called Phoenard truly sets itself apart. The gadget, which is powered by an ATmega2560, not only sits perfectly in your hand but can slide quite easily into your pocket. The 11.8 x 6.1 x 1.1 cm device boasts a full-color touchscreen display and an on-board battery, and is even equipped with its own operating environment. Given its incredible versatility, the self-programmed Phoenard is bound to make every true Maker’s dream a reality. As its creators note, the prototyping platform can be used as the ‘brain’ of any DIY Project. Unlike an Arduino, Phoenard encompasses several features built entirely into a single unit, which can also serve as your daily mobile device. Sure, you can buy a smartphone, but wouldn’t it be even more awesome to devise your own?


A gaming console that’s smaller than your credit card

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Developed by National Engineering School of Saint-Etienne student Aurélien Rodot, Gamebuino is a retro-inspired, pocket-sized game console built around an ATmega328. No larger than a credit card, the successfully crowdfunded device gives a whole new meaning to portable gaming. With its metallic and vintage appearance, it will surely spark up some technostalgia of the Gameboy Advance of the early 2000s. According to its creators, Gamebuino is a true turnkey solution that enables Makers of all ages to begin creating their own 8-bit games — even those with very little programming knowledge. Advanced users will take comfort in knowing that the device is open-source, hackable and expandable.


Another open-source 8-bit gaming console you’ll love

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In honor of Game Boy’s 25th birthday, the Microduino Studio team debuted the Microduino-Joypad, an 8-bit multi-functional game console capable of playing all-time classics ranging from Tetris to Snake. The open-source gadget allows Makers to relive some of their greatest childhood memories of clicking away at those giant buttons on a vintage Nintendo handheld. Based on both ATmega328P and ATmega644PA MCUs, the Joypad can be used for everything, from controlling a quadcopter to playing a few levels of the latest Angry Birds installment.


An interactive near-eye display

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A group of researchers from Nokia and a number of universities have come together to design a gadget that has the same benefits of Google Glass, while eradicating the need to wear them around one’s face. The device, which is tethered to an Epson Android computer and an Arduino Pro Mini (ATmega168), provides an eye-level display for quick, discreet access. Named after the small magnification tool commonly used by jewelers, Loupe is described by its creators as a novel interactive device with a near-eye virtual display similar to head-up display glasses. With its cylindrical shape, the chapstick-sized gadget can be held up to one’s eye when a user wants to check their Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and such. When not in use, the device can easily be stowed away in a pocket or worn like a pendant necklace.


An open-source radiation detector

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Developed by AeroSplice, the APOC Pro is an advanced open-source Gamma particle and X-ray radiation detector powered by an ATmega328. The device logs data onto a microSD card in a readable format, which is later analyzed using a custom web application and displayed to other users located throughout the world.

Pixelduino is an Arduino-compatible board with a built-in display


Give your Arduino-compatible projects an awesome OLED screen. 


Developed by the Rapid Prototypes team, Pixelduino — which has now been successfully funded on Kickstarter — is an Arduino-compatible microcontroller equipped with a full-color OLED display.

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Based on an Atmel ATmega328P, the board features a 1.5-inch, 128×128 pixel color screen and a microSD card reader. According to its creators, the Pixelduino can be used for a wide-range of applications, such as designing wearables, attaching sensors, showing data in text or visual form, displaying debug information, and even creating simple games.

In addition to its embedded megaAVR MCU, other key components include:

  • I/O pins: 14 digital, 6 analog
  • Memory: 32K flash, 2K RAM
  • Voltage regulator: TPS61201 3.3V boost converter
  • Input voltage: 1.5 – 5.5V recommended
  • Supply current: 100mA @ 0.5V, 1A @ 3V, 1.3A @ 3.7V
  • Power connector: JST PH (standard for small LiPo cells)
  • Display: 128×128 16-bit color 1.5″ (38mm) OLED w/ SSD1351 driver
  • PCB Size: 1.7″ x 1.7″

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“The display controller also has some graphics acceleration built-in, and in addition to being able to redraw only specific portions of the screen, the display offset can also be changed. And, if you are familiar with how old-school platform games were written, you will know this is key to achieving high speed scrolling without much processor power,” a company rep writes.

Pixelduino’s display is completely compatible with Adafruit’s GFX, as well as Arduino’s SPI and SD libraries. In addition, the display controller is equipped with some built-in graphics acceleration, allowing users to redraw only specific parts of the screen or change the display offset to scroll vertically.

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“Communication with the display and microSD card are both handled with the SPI bus on pins 10-13. Pins 8 and 9 are also used to command the display. Aside from these, the rest of the pins are available for any use. The I2C bus for example is available on pins A4 and A5.”

The team notes that the board is capable of running on alkaline, lithium, NiMh or single-cell LiPo batteries. The on-board boost regulator efficiently steps up the voltage to the 3.3V the Pixelduino requires, and features a built-in linear regulator to step the voltage down when necessary.

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Furthermore, in true open-source fashion, all of Pixelduino’s schematics and PCB layouts are readily available so that Makers can create, edit or learn from the design themselves. New firmware can be loaded using the Arduino IDE with the same USB serial programmers boards like the Arduino Pro (ATmega168/ATmega328) use, or with an ISP programmer using a pogo-pin adapter.

Interested? You can head on over to the project’s official Kickstarter page, where the company is currently seeking $7,500. If all goes to plan, Rapid Prototypes hopes to begin shipping Pixelduino boards in May 2015.