Open Hardware: CrowPi, ESP32, 3-D Printing, and More
-
CNX Software ☛ Sipeed NanoKVM-USB low-cost USB KVM solution works with Surveillance Giant Google Chrome or other compatible web browsers
Sipeed NanoKVM-USB is an inexpensive and tiny full HD USB KVM solution with HDMI and USB-C inputs connected to the target, and another USB-C port that connects to the host remotely controlling the target with keyboard, mouse, and monitor emulation. The NanoKVM-USB also features a USB Type-A port that can be switched between host and target modes, for instance, to share a USB drive between the two computers.
-
CNX Software ☛ WeAct MSPM0G3507 development board features Texas Instruments MSPM0G3507SRHBR Cortex-M0+ mixed-signal MCU
WeAct MSPM0G3507 is a BluePill-like development board equipped with Texas Instruments’ 80 MHz MSPM0G3507SRHBR Arm Cortex-M0+ mixed-signal MCU with 128KB flash and 32KB SRAM. The board features a USB-C port for power and programming, two buttons for Reset and BSL (Bootstrap Loader), a 4-pin SWD port for debugging, and two 18-pin headers for GPIOs, CAN Bus, ADC, DAC, I2C, UART, and other interfaces.
-
CNX Software ☛ QuadClock PCB – An ESP32-S3 multi-display clock controller for DIY enthusiasts
The QuadClock PCB is an ESP32-S3-powered multi-display clock controller designed to serve as a foundation for creating a four-TFT-display clock. It supports up to four 1.69-inch rectangular TFT displays (240×280) or four 1.28” round displays (240×240). It manages essential functions such as driving the displays and maintaining precise time, allowing you to focus on crafting a unique enclosure or integrating additional features.
-
Tom's Hardware ☛ Elecrow's Raspberry Pi powered CrowPi 3 educational kit offers plenty of scope for learning
Open-source computer hardware and services specialist Elecrow has shared the first details of its new CrowPi 3 open-source learning tool.
-
Hackaday ☛ A Guide To Making The Right Microcontroller Choice
Starting a new microcontroller project can be pretty daunting. While you have at least a rough idea of where you want to end up, there are so many ways to get there that you can get locked into “analysis paralysis” and never get the project off the ground. Or arguably worse, you just throw whatever dev board you have in the junk bin and deal with the consequences.
-
Jonathan Dowland ☛ Jonathan Dowland: printables.com feed
I wanted to follow new content posted to Printables.com with a feed reader, but Printables.com doesn't provide one. Neither do the other obvious 3d model catalogues. So, I started building one.
-
Tom's Hardware ☛ Maker creates Raspberry Pi-powered thermal fusion night vision goggles
Angus Logue is using a Raspberry Pi 4 to power his cool thermal fusion night vision goggles that seriously step up the night vision game.