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Getting started with BLE is easier than ever. T.K. Hareendran uses an inexpensive Texas Instruments CC2541 based module, Arduino, and Android to get connected.
If you are interested in learning more about using the Arduino Nano 33 BLE microcontroller, you may be interested in a new article published by Djynet.
The Arduino Nano 33 BLE Rev2 is a significant leap forward in the world of microcontroller boards, designed to empower a diverse array of projects with its advanced capabilities.
Here's an interesting way to control an Arduino using data-over-sound, demonstrated by Chirp. They show how to use their SDK to send an RGB value to change the colour of a on-board LED.
The new Nano design continues the legacy of Arduino boards being prototype friendly, but adds the ability to include the boards in a product design based on surface mount assembly.
Ride data from the accelerometer on an Arduino Nano 33 BLE Sense was captured on a smartphone via Arduino Science Journal.
Arduino has bought out second revisions of its Nano 33 BLE and Nano 33 BLE Sense bluetooth-equipped microcontroller boards, keeping the sensor mix, but changing several of the sensor ICs.
I have a few projects in mind and I'd like to give Arduino a go, I've never really tinkered with electronics before. What do I need to get started? I'm looking at an Arduino Nano a few bread ...
Other official builds include the Arduino Nano, designed to take up as little room as possible, and the Arduino Mega which features significantly more inputs and outputs than its cousin.
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