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Posted in Arduino Hacks, classic hacks, clock hacks Tagged flash, oled, retro, rtc, ssd1306, vintage Thirty Six Frets For A 3D Printed Guitar → ...
Posted in clock hacks Tagged arduino, enigma, horology, oled, pocket watch ← Etch-a-Sketch 3D Printed With Cell Phone New Transistor Uses Metal And Air Instead Of Semiconductors → ...
Just when you thought you’ve seen every strange variation of clock there is to see, we find one based on an Arduino that tracks the phases of the moon.
After waiting almost a month, I opened up the OLED and went right to testing it out. The link in the description pointed me to this website, which is a tutorial from Adafruit. Apparently, Adafruit ...
1. Arduino Nano Microcontroller: This small yet powerful microcontroller will be the brain of your clock, handling all the logic and control for the LEDs. 2.
Maker Michael Klements has built a unique electromechanical clock using a little Arduino hardware, code, and 28 servos, which tilt panels to reveal the ...
The MicroView is a "Chip-Sized" arduino-compatible that features a built-in OLED display, and is sized perfectly for bread boarding, or use in many different projects. Unlike many of the Arduino ...
The clock consists of numbers only: no case, no background, no nothing. Four OLED shapes mimic the classic seven-bar design of the digital readout and internal light detectors tell the numbers ...
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