Arduino® Nicla Vision is a ready-to-use standalone camera for analyzing and processing images at the edge. It's suitable for asset tracking, object recognition and predictive maintenance thanks to its 2MP color camera, smart 6-axis motion sensor, integrated microphone and distance sensor. Quickly implement sensor nodes that send collected data to the Arduino® Cloud (or third-party vendor service) via integrated WiFi/BLE connectivity.
This design is a connector for the Raspberry Pi HQ camera.
High reference value, the 50-year-old work of FatFS author ChaN
A Raspberry Pi board is used as the processor to process eight brain electrical signals in real time.
The style of enameled wire is as usual, and the craftsmanship is still excellent. The power board designed this time is made of double panels, and a copper-laying design is applied. The insulation layer is laid first and then the copper. If the device on the front needs to be grounded, break the insulation layer and solder it to the copper.
A phase compensation algorithm is used to compensate for the additional phase delay introduced by the multiplexed ADC, thereby producing an effect equivalent to a synchronously sampled ADC.
The board of this design is intended to sit between the fundamental and harmonic boards and monitor the SPI data running to the display. Onboard ECP5 will mirror the display and output a copy to a digital monitor.
This design has a PMOD for the SD card to emulate the SD card to the host system.
A PMOD with a quad 7-segment display connected to a pair of 74hc595 shift registers. There are 3 tactile buttons.
Ported the 3D rotation + meteor shower background demo to H7, and the pure rendering is very smooth.
Suitable for long distance RS-485 networks. The design provides transient protection from the effects of ESD, EFT and surge transients as specified in the IEC 61000 transient immunity standard.
This design is a PMOD with the ublox NEO GNSS receiver footprint. Able to receive GPS and GLONASS simultaneously.
SYZYGY is an FPGA extension standard for medium to high speed interfaces. This breakout connects the SerDes in the SYZYGY-TXR connector to the card edge to act as a PCIe x4 add-in card. This breakout is very simple and can be made into a shorter SYZYGY pod.
SYZYGY is an FPGA extension standard for medium to high speed interfaces. This breakout connects the Channel 0 TX/RX SerDes from the SYZYGY-TXR connector to the edge of the card to act as a PCIe x1 add-in card.
This design is a wing add-on that attaches to the OrangeCrab and adds a Sharp Memory LCD. 400x240 on/off pixels. The board is the size of the monitor.
The meiji-led-ring is a compact light source that can be mounted on the front of a Meiji microscope. The illuminator uses 24 LEDs along with some high frequency boost drivers to avoid flickering when shooting. The device is powered by the USB-C port. A small ATSAML10 microcontroller is used to control the brightness of the LED driver. The user controls a series of touch sensors from the edge of the PCB.
The led-panel originated from the author's desire to use a donated roll of white LEDs to break out 48 LEDs on a compact board. Its output power should reach about 4W. It has no controller and is purely for testing a set of LEDs to see if they would be suitable for some form of lighting attached to a gooseneck.
Gregory Davill is a technical expert from Australia who is very famous and active in the field of open source hardware. In December 2020, he insisted on designing a circuit board every day, using KiCad to complete the circuit design and PCB layout and routing. This is the adventure-calendar-of-circuits-2020 project. This design is a JTAG programmer based on FT232H.
It is a very beautiful and convenient little board. But it has a small flaw, the ice40 FPGA it uses is very simple, and it's generally fun to see people doing exciting projects with 5k LUTs. Sometimes it's convenient to have some extra space available when experimenting.
icebreaker++ is a very nice and convenient little board. But it has a small flaw, the ice40 FPGA it uses is very simple, and it's generally fun to see people doing exciting projects with 5k LUTs. Sometimes it's convenient to have some extra space available when experimenting.