Friday, August 31, 2018

The Power of Anomalies

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Progress in science is sometimes propelled by the discovery of experimental oddities that inspire a fresh perspective on nature, Via Scientific American

Progress in science is sometimes triggered by surprises. Data collection resembles gathering of new pieces in a jigsaw puzzle and placing them together. Sometimes one of the pieces does not quite fit. It is natural for scientists to instinctively argue that such a piece does not belong; perhaps it is an artifact driven by uncertainties in the data or a misinterpretation of the experiment. This might indeed be the case in most instances. But every now and then, an anomaly of this type signals a real discrepancy from expectations, either a violation of a highly respected but incomplete law of nature—namely an exception to the rule, or an unexpected surprise—signaling the possibility of “new physics.”

One of the well-known historical examples involves the discovery of the Planck spectrum of blackbody radiation, which could not have been explained by classical physics and which ushered in quantum mechanics. The anomaly was declared by the British physicist Lord Kelvin in 1900 as one of the two remaining dark clouds obscuring “the beauty and clearness of the dynamical theory” before its revolutionary role in the development of modern physics was recognized. A more recent example involves quasicrystals, which represent a state of solids that violates translational symmetry. Their accidental discovery by Dan Shechtman in 1982 was discredited for decades since it violated textbook assumptions, but its significance was eventually recognized by the Nobel Prize Committee in 2011.

An example for a current unresolved anomaly involves the reported discrepancy between the measured values of the Hubble constant H0 (the expansion rate of the universe) in the local universe (based on observations of supernovae) and in the universe just 400,000 years after the big bang (as measured from the brightness anisotropies of the cosmic background radiation). If real, this anomaly might signal the existence of a sterile neutrino; a form of decaying dark matter; a growing dark energy or something else. Another current example involves the anomalously strong absorption of electromagnetic radiation by hydrogen atoms during the cosmic dawn, as measured by the EDGES experiment, which might potentially indicate some form of interaction between ordinary matter and dark matter.

See more!

Aerosol Earth

This is terrifying.

Via NASA Earth Observatory

The visualization above highlights GEOS FP model output for aerosols on August 23, 2018. On that day, huge plumes of smoke drifted over North America and Africa, three different tropical cyclones churned in the Pacific Ocean, and large clouds of dust blew over deserts in Africa and Asia. The storms are visible within giant swirls of sea salt aerosol (blue), which winds loft into the air as part of sea spray. Black carbon particles (red) are among the particles emitted by fires; vehicle and factory emissions are another common source. Particles the model classified as dust are shown in purple. The visualization includes a layer of night light data collected by the day-night band of the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on Suomi NPP that shows the locations of towns and cities.

Read more.

NEW GUIDE: John Park’s HalloWing Lightsabers @adafruit @johnedgarpark #adafruit

Making your own lightsabers may sound like a highly involved project that takes years of study under a wizened master, and exotic tools and materials — but it doesn’t have to be difficult at all!

In this guide we’ll show you how to make your own interactive no-soldering-required lightsabers using common materials from the hardware or craft store and a few simple techniques.

With the HalloWing, we can use the onboard accelerometer to detect saber swinging and hitting motions, control the NeoPixel strip for blade animations, and play sounds through the built in amplifier to a small, yet powerful speaker!

Plus, you’ll learn some very handy tricks for adding structure and diffusion to NeoPixel strips using corrugated plastic, parchment paper, and polycarbonate bulb guard tubes.

New Products 8/29/18 Featuring Google AIY Vision Full Kit Includes Pi Zero WH v1.1 (Video)

New Products 8/29/18 Featuring Google AIY Vision Full Kit Includes Pi Zero WH v1.1 (Video)


IRC Recently Celebrated its 30th Birthday | #InternetRelayChat

Report via the University of Oulu where IRC was developed:

IRC (Internet Relay Chat) was born at the Department of Information Processing Science of the University of Oulu 30 years ago.  Jarkko Oikarinen developed the internet chat system back in 1988 in addition to his summer job. Today, people are still using IRC.

Computer Science student Atte Jauhiainen uses IRC every day. Mostly he chats about everyday topics and occurrences, like lunch dates and news of the day. “There’s a tremendous amount of channels on IRC, and it’s easy to create more. For example events and hobbies can have their own channels,” says Jauhiainen.

Jauhiainen likes to use IRC because it’s a versatile media of communication and can be customized. “IRC is not dependent on any device. You can use it on your phone, computer or even video game console, if you like. Of course also tradition has it’s effect,” he says.

The Guild of Computer Science students (OTiT) uses IRC for everyday communication. “Freshmen will have a compulsory IRC training during autumn semester. I hadn’t used IRC before my studies, but IRC can be useful in our field. Using IRC makes you familiar with the command line of Linux,” Jauhiainen hints.

Read more here.

Guardin: Turret Mounted 3rd eye #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

Via Hackaday:

If you are a gardener, you’ll know only too well the distress of seeing your hard work turned into a free lunch for passing herbivorous wildlife. It’s something that has evidently vexed [Jim], because he’s come up with an automated Raspberry Pi-controlled turretx to seek out invading deer, and in his words: “Persuade them to munch elsewhere”.

Before you groan and sigh that here’s yet another pan and tilt camera, let us reassure you that this one is a little bit special. For a start, it rotates upon a set of slip rings rather than an untidy mess of twisted cables, so it can perfom 360 degree rotations at will, then it has a rather well-designed tilting cage for its payload. The write-up is rather functional but worth persevering with, and he’s posted a YouTube video that we’ve placed below the break.

This is a project that still has some way to go, for example just how those pesky deer are to be sent packing isn’t made entirely clear, but we think it already shows enough potential to be worthy of a second look. The slip ring mechanism in particular could find a home in many other projects.

Learn more!


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Alexa Shelf Manager with Raspberry Pi @Raspberry_Pi #PiDay #RaspberryPi

via from Botmation via hackster.io

Decided I needed a quick and easy way to find and store my things using a voice assistant. I also wanted control over my data locally and not rely on the cloud. So I kept the data base locally in a csv file on my raspberry pi. This gives it a added benefit as I can access the csv at any time and do more advance queries later. I choose Alexa because it is something I have not worked with before and wanted to see how it works compare to google. I also used a pi zero because I wanted to use something cheap which will control the LED and not dedicate a pi 3.

The flow is relatively simple. You ask Alexa with a special skill word called “invocation” such as “storage room”. Then the Alexa skill will take your query and send it off to Amazon’s Lambda application. This is where your query is parsed and the code here will determine the task to perform. In this case it will take your query as is and send it off to AWS IOT Thing. The IOT-Thing is external accessible point in the cloud where raspberry pi with the proper credentials can access and subscribe for interactions. The IOT-Thing will update it’s flags to indicate a change has been made. The python script on the pi will see that there has been a change and will initiate a download of the data. The data contains your query to Alexa. The python script on the pi will then parse out what you are asking for and determines an action. If you were looking for something and there was match then a LED will light up where your item is.

See full project breakdown here!


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Holocube #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

CircuitPython on Raspberry Pi: UPDATED GUIDES for DRV2605, SI4713, LSM303, FXAS21002C, and FXOS8700

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That’s right! It’s CircuitPython on Raspberry Pi! Wire up your favorite sensors and use the same great CircuitPython code you’ve been using with microcontrollers right on your Raspberry Pi!

We’ve got tons of projects, libraries and example code for CircuitPython on microcontrollers, and thanks to the flexibility and power of Python it’s easy to get it working with micro-computers like Raspberry Pi or other ‘Linux with GPIO pins available’ single board computers.

We’ve written a special library called Adafruit Blinka to provide the layer that translates the CircuitPython hardware API to whatever library the Linux board provides.

blinka-raspberry pi

We’ve added all the libraries to PyPi so installation is super simple via pip. We’ve also updated the CircuitPython guides! They now have sections for wiring up the sensor to and installing the libraries on your Raspberry Pi. The CircuitPython code works exactly the same way it works on microcontrollers, so the code examples will work on your Raspberry Pi too!

We have over 80 guides to update, so watch for updates to the Adafruit Learning System in batches. Here’s the next five (the last one is two together on one board):

Adafruit DRV2605L Haptic Motor Controller – The DRV2605 from TI is a fancy little motor driver. Rather than controlling a stepper motor or DC motor, its designed specifically for controlling haptic motors – buzzers and vibration motors. Normally one would just turn those kinds of motors on and off, but this driver has the ability to have various effects when driving a vibe motor. For example, ramping the vibration level up and down, ‘click’ effects, different buzzer levels, or even having the vibration follow a musical/audio input.

Adafruit Stereo FM Transmitter with RDS/RBDS Breakout – Si4713 – Yaaar! Become your very own pirate radio station with this FM radio transmitter. This breakout board, based on the best-of-class Si4713, is an all-in-one stereo audio FM transmitter that can also transmit RDS/RBDS data!

Triple-axis Accelerometer+Magnetometer (Compass) Board – LSM303 – Inside are two sensors, one is a classic 3-axis accelerometer, which can tell you which direction is down towards the Earth (by measuring gravity). The other is a magnetometer that can sense where the strongest magnetic force is coming from, generally used to detect magnetic north. By combining this data you can then orient your project!

Adafruit Precision NXP 9-DOF Breakout Board – FXOS8700 + FXAS21002 – The NXP Precision 9DoF breakout combines two of the best motion sensors we’ve tested here at Adafruit: The FXOS8700 3-Axis accelerometer and magnetometer, and the FXAS21002 3-axis gyroscope.

Check out these updated guides today in the Adafruit Learning System.

Farmbots and Raspberry Pi help a local garden grow #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

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Fun story out of Des Moines Washington Via the Waterland Blog:

Kids work in Midway Park Community Garden. Powers’ most recent idea was a program that included a four-week course that teaches Des Moines students to power a robot (called a FarmBot) with the ability to plant and cultivate a variety of crops in a community garden (Midway Park Community Garden) staffed by students and community volunteers. Students learn how to use tools to build, operate, monitor and maintain the equipment, the garden as well as all the produce the garden generates which in turn will be donated to local food banks. The FarmBot is able to perform almost all processes prior to harvesting including sowing, mechanical weed control, and watering.

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He said acquiring the FarmBot was a key component to the program. The FarmBot runs on Raspberry Pi, which is a small and affordable computer that users can use to learn programming. The FarmBot also allows users to adapt the robot by building their own parts and new features. “They encourage you to build on their device — communities can take it and make it their own,” Powers said.
The first four-week course ended earlier this summer but Powers is just getting started. He has a goal of acquiring and putting together 25 FarmBots in the next five years and using them to create sustainable and healthy food sources around Washington. He said places like Des Moines and Sea-Tac are considered food deserts, regions with high poverty without access to healthy food sources, and that nourishing food readily available will make a long-term difference.

All that’s required from student recruits is an interest in technology. Many students he talked to were a little intimidated by the programming and technology aspect of the course.

“All they needed to have was an interest — I encouraged those who were too afraid and tried to not scare anybody off,” he said. “The FarmBot is a daunting looking machine. We’re putting together a robot, working on making it move and function the way it is supposed to. But with guidance it was relatively easy; we were able to get it done in 12 days.”

Learn more!


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Magic Mirror Made Using an Old LCD monitor and a Rspberry Pi 3

Rishabh Anand shared this project on Youtube!

I would like to greatly thank grensom.
Go check out his channel- https://www.youtube.com/channel/

See more!

Simple Script for Turning Pis into Google Calendar Displays | #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

Matt Webb has a simple bash script and walkthrough for turning a Raspberry Pi Zero (in his example) into the brains driving a bunch of “Google Calendar displays” he has installed in various places – for at-a-glance reminders and prompts of upcoming events. (It is interesting to consider how our lives have become focused around events and online calendars.)

I have Pi-powered Google Calendar displays all over the place – I wrote a script to make it easy to make more of them (or other similiar displays that just use a web browser).

The install script sets a cron job to launch a fullscreen Chromium window in kiosk mode at boot, disabling screen timeout. Configurables set during install:

  • Hide cursor (good for non-interactive displays)
  • Clear browser cache at boot
  • Refresh page at specified minute interval
  • Delay browser launch (allow extra time for boot and/or network connectivity)

Do not use under any circumstances where not being able to leave the browser is a priority, as this is in no way prevented. Built for and tested on Raspbian Stretch running on a Pi Zero.

If you need to modify anything after installation Matt has simple instructions for that too – read more here.


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Social Media Follower Counter #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

via Raspberry Pi

If you run a local business like an electronics shop or a café, or if you just want to grow your online following and influence, this project is a fun way to help you keep track of your progress. A counter could also help contribute to growing your following if you hang it on the wall and actively ask your customers to like/follow you to see the numbers go up!

You’ve probably seen those social media follower counters that feature mechanical splitflap displays. In this project we’ll build a counter powered by RGB LEDs that scrolls through four social profiles, using APIs to pull the number of followers for each account. I’m using YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram; you can, of course, tailor the project to your needs.

This project involves a bit of electronics, a bit of software coding, and a bit of woodwork, as well as some fairly advanced display work as we transfer a small portion of the Raspberry Pi’s HDMI output onto the LED matrices.

Read more!


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Self Alerting Bin @Raspberry_Pi #PiDay #RaspberryPi

from via hackster.io

Waste Management is the biggest problem in all the countries. So to reduce the rate of overflow of the dustbins we have to propose a system which can easily send an alert from the dustbin to the respected person to take a proper action. This project is implemented for one dustbin which can send an Mail alert to the person who is responsible for that dustbin management.

See full project breakdown here!


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Smile-Activated Marshmallow Catapult #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

via Raspberry Pi Pod

Ben Brabyn wanted to encourage his friends and family to smile a bit more and so he came up with the solution: marshmellows! A Raspberry Pi and a webcam are used to detect a smiling face and then a hacked toy catapult is used to launch marshmellows at the user. He’s used a MotoZero motor controller from The Pi Hut to control the catapult and then written some Python code using OpenCV to read the image from the webcam and detect the smile.

Read more.


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Rug Warrior Pi Robot, Pogo #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

Well hello there Pogo! From Alan McDonley on on vimeo:

Raspberry Pi3 upgrade to Rug Warrior Pro Robot running egret.py (think alot, act a little)

See more


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Rug Warrior Pi Robot, Pogo #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

Well hello there Pogo! From Alan McDonley on on vimeo:

Raspberry Pi3 upgrade to Rug Warrior Pro Robot running egret.py (think alot, act a little)

See more


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Interactive Installation “Intuition” Uses a Raspberry Pi and Bare Conductive Paint @Raspberry_Pi #PiDay #RaspberryPi

via Bare Conductive

What is Icelandic Conductive Intuition, and what’s its link to creative technology?

Experimental Music Composition & Sound Designer, Hwan Yun was inspired by the calmness of Icelandic nature and wanted to bring this element to an interactive installation, where an audience could interact with nature.

Hwan developed a huge interest in the vast and minimal appearance of the Icelandic landscape and decided to create a dark and mysterious soundscape during his residency at Listhus in October 2017.

To be able to bring this installation to life, Hwan had to incorporate new technologies in his work. For this exhibition, in addition to the Bare Conductive’s Touch Board, Pi Cap and Raspberry Pi 3, he also used a 3D pen and Electric Paint.

With the above ingredients, as Hwan calls them, because of the freedom these tools give him, he turned the Icelandinc inspirational shapes, painted on paper, into an interactive sound installation.

See and learn more!



3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Interactive Installation “Intuition” Uses a Raspberry Pi and Bare Conductive Paint @Raspberry_Pi #PiDay #RaspberryPi

via Bare Conductive

What is Icelandic Conductive Intuition, and what’s its link to creative technology?

Experimental Music Composition & Sound Designer, Hwan Yun was inspired by the calmness of Icelandic nature and wanted to bring this element to an interactive installation, where an audience could interact with nature.

Hwan developed a huge interest in the vast and minimal appearance of the Icelandic landscape and decided to create a dark and mysterious soundscape during his residency at Listhus in October 2017.

To be able to bring this installation to life, Hwan had to incorporate new technologies in his work. For this exhibition, in addition to the Bare Conductive’s Touch Board, Pi Cap and Raspberry Pi 3, he also used a 3D pen and Electric Paint.

With the above ingredients, as Hwan calls them, because of the freedom these tools give him, he turned the Icelandinc inspirational shapes, painted on paper, into an interactive sound installation.

See and learn more!



3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Smile Activated Marshmallow Launcher @Raspberry_Pi #PiDay #RaspberryPi

Super fun project tutorial from instructables user BenBrabyn.

You want to encourage guests, colleagues, friends and family to be happy? You need a Smile Activated Marshmallow Launcher. The Raspberry Pi powered “SAML” detects a smile and then launches a marshmallow at it – happiness pays off!

Read more.


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Ultimate YouTube Live Camera from the Adafruit Learning System #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

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Use a Raspberry Pi to stream directly to Youtube Live with the touch of a button! From the Adafruit Learning System:

As a YouTuber, I’m always looking for ways to streamline different tasks. Live streaming is definitely something that has the opportunity to be a LOT simpler. It would be nice if you just had a camera that you can take with you, turn on, and live stream. So that will be the primary goal of this project: to make a dedicated camera for live streaming to YouTube.

My idea is to make a video camera using a Raspberry Pi 3, 2.8″ LCD Touchscreen, and the Pi Camera as the basic platform. We’ll also need a small USB microphone to record audio, and some type of rechargeable battery to power it all. Then I’m going to 3D print a custom case shaped like the YouTube logo to power it all.

More of a visual learner? Then feel free to watch my four part video series on making this project from start to finish! View the successes and pitfalls as I go step by step through the entire project.

Check out the full guide!


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Ultimate YouTube Live Camera from the Adafruit Learning System #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

NewImage

Use a Raspberry Pi to stream directly to Youtube Live with the touch of a button! From the Adafruit Learning System:

As a YouTuber, I’m always looking for ways to streamline different tasks. Live streaming is definitely something that has the opportunity to be a LOT simpler. It would be nice if you just had a camera that you can take with you, turn on, and live stream. So that will be the primary goal of this project: to make a dedicated camera for live streaming to YouTube.

My idea is to make a video camera using a Raspberry Pi 3, 2.8″ LCD Touchscreen, and the Pi Camera as the basic platform. We’ll also need a small USB microphone to record audio, and some type of rechargeable battery to power it all. Then I’m going to 3D print a custom case shaped like the YouTube logo to power it all.

More of a visual learner? Then feel free to watch my four part video series on making this project from start to finish! View the successes and pitfalls as I go step by step through the entire project.

Check out the full guide!


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

PiPod: Raspberry Pi Music Player! #piday #raspberrypi @Raspberry_Pi

Pipod featured

Via Hackaday:

[Bram] wasn’t satisfied with the portable music playback devices that were currently available. He craved an offline music player that had a large storage capacity but found that this was only available in high-end, off-the-shelf options, which were far too expensive. [Bram] decided to make his own, powered by a Raspberry Pi zero. After building an initial prototype, the design was iterated a few times, with the latest version featuring a BOM cost of roughly €80.

The whole project is open source, with hardware and software files available on the project GitHub. A 2.2″ TFT displays the UI, which is of course completely customisable. Everything is squashed into a 3D printed case, which has the smallest form factor possible whilst retaining a decent amount of battery life. The electronics are what you’d expect: a boost converter to produce 5 V for the Pi from the 3.7V battery, a charge controller and a battery protection circuit. As a bonus, the battery voltage is monitored with a 12-bit ADC which reports to the Pi, enabling it to do a safe shutdown at low voltage, and display battery level on the UI.

Learn more!


3055 06Each Friday is PiDay here at Adafruit! Be sure to check out our posts, tutorials and new Raspberry Pi related products. Adafruit has the largest and best selection of Raspberry Pi accessories and all the code & tutorials to get you up and running in no time!

Sphere holder #3DPrinting #3DThursday

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larkinj shared this project on Thingiverse!

Holder for spheres. Basic design is for a sphere 110 mm in diameter, but easily scaled to other sizes. In the photos the clear sphere is with an unmodified 110mm version. The crystal sphere is 70 mm in diameter.
Seems to print fine without any support.

See more!


649-1
Every Thursday is #3dthursday here at Adafruit! The DIY 3D printing community has passion and dedication for making solid objects from digital models. Recently, we have noticed electronics projects integrated with 3D printed enclosures, brackets, and sculptures, so each Thursday we celebrate and highlight these bold pioneers!

Have you considered building a 3D project around an Arduino or other microcontroller? How about printing a bracket to mount your Raspberry Pi to the back of your HD monitor? And don’t forget the countless LED projects that are possible when you are modeling your projects in 3D!

9V Battery Pack #3DThursday #3DPrinting

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Shared by andrewytiger on Thingiverse:

This a simple 9V battery pack/connector that allows you to power other projects or devices. It is particularly useful for powering Arduino’s or small circuits which require a 9V DC current. This print requires no glue to assemble. Just press the male ends of two jumper wires into their slots and slide in a battery, Then slide on the clip as shown in the pictures. Never buy a 9V connector again.

Features

  • Holds the battery securely against the leads for a reliable connection.
  • To disconnect the battery from the circuit, simply slide the battery up. This disengages it from the leads, while still keeping it in place.
  • No glue required for assembly.

Note: Toleranced for a finely tuned Anet A8. If tolerances are too tight or too loose, try scaling the model by 0.5 – 1%.

Download the files and learn more


649-1
Every Thursday is #3dthursday here at Adafruit! The DIY 3D printing community has passion and dedication for making solid objects from digital models. Recently, we have noticed electronics projects integrated with 3D printed enclosures, brackets, and sculptures, so each Thursday we celebrate and highlight these bold pioneers!

Have you considered building a 3D project around an Arduino or other microcontroller? How about printing a bracket to mount your Raspberry Pi to the back of your HD monitor? And don’t forget the countless LED projects that are possible when you are modeling your projects in 3D!

The Adafruit Learning System has dozens of great tools to get you well on your way to creating incredible works of engineering, interactive art, and design with your 3D printer! If you’ve made a cool project that combines 3D printing and electronics, be sure to let us know, and we’ll feature it here!

NEW GUIDE: Hallowing Spirit Board

NEW GUIDE on the Adafruit Learning System: Hallowing Spirit Board

Sure, the animated eyeball that ships on the Adafruit Hallowing board is spooky…but “you wanna see something really scary?”

Move around an invisible spirit board (aka Ouija board) that can be seen only through the Hallowing’s screen. The onboard accelerometer reacts to subtle tilting to scroll about, or touch one of the capacitive fangs to have the oracle spell out a message on its own. With a little Arduino know-how you can customize the messages! Add a lanyard to make a cool Halloween fashion accessory.

There’s also an explanation of how this sort of buttery-smooth™ animation is accomplished.

Read More…

Ultimate Banana Holder #3DPrinting #3DThursday

7bdaf1ced22c2a7949ebe81ce972b0ba preview featured

Matthew_Sotebier shared this project on Thingiverse!

Have you ever used a banana hook before? They work great until your down to one banana then your hook will no longer hold the banana! This inspired this project. I wanted a way to hold my bananas because they are said to stay fresh longer if they are hung up. So I decided to use Gravity!

The banana holder is simple you push up on it and the grabber opens then you let gravity pull down on the bananas and the grabber will grab hold. the heavier the bananas the tighter the grabber will hold them to ensure that they do not drop.

See more!


649-1
Every Thursday is #3dthursday here at Adafruit! The DIY 3D printing community has passion and dedication for making solid objects from digital models. Recently, we have noticed electronics projects integrated with 3D printed enclosures, brackets, and sculptures, so each Thursday we celebrate and highlight these bold pioneers!

Have you considered building a 3D project around an Arduino or other microcontroller? How about printing a bracket to mount your Raspberry Pi to the back of your HD monitor? And don’t forget the countless LED projects that are possible when you are modeling your projects in 3D!

NEW GUIDE: Hallowing Spirit Board

NEW GUIDE on the Adafruit Learning System: Hallowing Spirit Board

Sure, the animated eyeball that ships on the Adafruit Hallowing board is spooky…but “you wanna see something really scary?”

Move around an invisible spirit board (aka Ouija board) that can be seen only through the Hallowing’s screen. The onboard accelerometer reacts to subtle tilting to scroll about, or touch one of the capacitive fangs to have the oracle spell out a message on its own. With a little Arduino know-how you can customize the messages! Add a lanyard to make a cool Halloween fashion accessory.

There’s also an explanation of how this sort of buttery-smooth™ animation is accomplished.

Read More…

Plinko Candy Dispenser #3DThursday #3DPrinting

11d4b0c009373986a4a432af8b33c00f preview featured

Shared by rickthing123 on Thingiverse:

I probably went overboard with this one, but I wanted a candy dispenser that was a little bigger than the ones I found in my searches here. It’s designed for medium sized jelly beans, though other candies or gumballs will probably work. It is a significant print time with all the various parts.

Download the files and learn more


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Every Thursday is #3dthursday here at Adafruit! The DIY 3D printing community has passion and dedication for making solid objects from digital models. Recently, we have noticed electronics projects integrated with 3D printed enclosures, brackets, and sculptures, so each Thursday we celebrate and highlight these bold pioneers!

Have you considered building a 3D project around an Arduino or other microcontroller? How about printing a bracket to mount your Raspberry Pi to the back of your HD monitor? And don’t forget the countless LED projects that are possible when you are modeling your projects in 3D!

The Adafruit Learning System has dozens of great tools to get you well on your way to creating incredible works of engineering, interactive art, and design with your 3D printer! If you’ve made a cool project that combines 3D printing and electronics, be sure to let us know, and we’ll feature it here!