NEW PRODUCT – Propeller Platform USB

Propellerplatformusb Lrg

NEW PRODUCT – Propeller Platform USB. The Propeller Platform USB is an open-source platform for building your own electronics projects with the new 8-core Parallax Propeller chip. This development board has the programming/debugging interface built in along with a microSD card slot.

Features!

  • Design your project in Spin, a custom programming language perfect for beginners (tutorials)
  • Collaborate with your PC, built in USB lets you update programs or share data with your computer
  • Interact with the real world, 32 I/O pins let you read tons of sensors and control multiple devices
  • Output video or advanced audio, Built in video hardware makes video easy, microSD lets you include Hi-Fi audio samples
  • Expand with any breadboard or protoboard, use a custom designed module, or create your own

What Can You Do With the Propeller Platform USB?
Turning Stuff Off and On:
32 I/O pins means you can connect to many devices at the same time – multiple LED's, real-time clocks, switches, and relays. It's easy to control dozens of devices.

Robotics:
A unique architecture lets you simultaneously control multiple motors and read multiple sensors. Take a look at the Spyder, an auto-balancing quadcopter running on the Propeller. A screw terminal power connection helps to connect a battery, and the ultra low dropout voltage regulator runs with as little as 5.5V input power.

Make Videogames:
If you want to make your own games, adding video output is as simple as using 3 resistors and an RCA jack. Games like X-Racer are possible, and you can output video in PAL, NTSC, or even VGA. Advanced sound capabilities let you enhance your game, too.

Advanced Audio:
Playback 16-bit stereo wavs stored on the microSD / SDHC card, output TOSLINK (optical) SPDIF audio with a standard LED, or create your own digital effects.

Expansion Options:

Specs:

  • 80Mhz 8-Core Parallax Propeller with removable 5MHz crystal
  • 64kb EEPROM for long-term program and data storage
  • 5V and 3.3V 1.5A Voltage Regulators accept 5.5v min. power input
  • Comes with a 2.1mm barrel power jack connector and screw terminal connector
  • 2.8" x 2.5" footprint with pin sockets to add additional Platform modules or connect to a breadboard.

The Propeller Platform USB comes pre-assembled – you just a 5.5v-12v power adapter and a mini-B USB cable.

Resources:

The Propeller Platform USB is designed and assembled in California.

Filed under: propeller — by adafruit, posted November 24, 2010 at 9:55 am


NEW PRODUCT – Propeller Platform Protoplus add-on

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NEW PRODUCT – Propeller Platform Protoplus add-on . The ProtoPlus adds video and audio to your Propeller Platform and includes a prototyping area. It can stack on top of the Propeller Platform, or underneath, and it uses the same pinouts as Parallax’s Demoboard (P11: Audio, P12,P13,P14: Video DAC). Traces in the prototyping area are also marked in the silkscreen, so it’s easy to see how the traces are connected. You’ll need a few tools to build this project: A soldering iron & solder, and Diagonal cutters. It takes about 5 minutes to assemble the ProtoPlus Module.

In stock and shipping now!

Filed under: propeller — by adafruit, posted at 9:51 am


Should Microsoft embrace Kinect ‘hacks?’ @ CNN.com

Pt 10611

Should Microsoft embrace Kinect ‘hacks?’ @ CNN.com

A couple of years ago Oliver Kreylos was looking for a cheap 3D camera when he heard about a company developing a device that would retail at around $200 — perfect for his project looking at ways of enhancing video communications.

Kreylos, a researcher in virtual reality at the University of California Davis, approached the company only to be told it had just been bought out by U.S. tech giant Microsoft, which wanted to use the device for its Xbox game console…

“When I saw what Hector had done, I literally dropped everything I did and biked to my local game store and bought one right away. I knew I was going to get the 3D reconstruction I’ve wanted for such a long time.”

Filed under: kinect hacking,random — by adafruit, posted at 9:19 am


Kinect bounty hunt (Q&A)

Pt 10612

Kinect bounty hunt (Q&A) @ CNET!

When Microsoft’s hot new Kinect motion-sensitive controller was released earlier this month, Phil Torrone and Limor Fried saw an opportunity to subvert what was being presented as a closed system.

Torrone and Fried, the principals behind the open-source hardware firm Adafruit Industries, love almost any kind of culture hacking, and in the Kinect, they recognized a system that presented users far more utility than Microsoft was offering.

Filed under: kinect hacking,random — by adafruit, posted at 8:00 am


Metropolis 2, kinetic artwork by artist Chris Burden. Featuring 1500 Hot Wheels

Metropolis 2, kinetic artwork by artist Chris Burden. Featuring 1500 Hot Wheels via EMSL.

Filed under: art — by adafruit, posted November 23, 2010 at 7:26 pm


NEW PRODUCT – Video Game Shield Kit

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NEW PRODUCT – Video Game Shield Kit by WayneandLayne – The Video Game Shield is an Arduino add-on shield to make your own video games, including graphics, text, sound effects, and music! Using the power of open source, this Shield includes everything you need to make awesome black-and-white video games on your TV. It supports up to two Nintendo Wii Nunchuck controllers for an easy and familiar interface.

Do you need to output text, graphics, or audio through RCA jacks to a TV? Do you need to work with two Nunchucks at the same time? You can do both of these things with Wayne and Layne’s Video Game Shield.

This is a kit, you must assemble and solder it using basic soldering tools such as an iron, solder and diagonal cutters. Arduino and controllers not included. You can get controllers in any games store for $20 or less

Open source, in stock and shipping now!



Keep the Cat Out of the Cradle with Arduino

Matt writes -

My wife and I have a baby on the way. As soon as I set up the crib, our cat decided to make it his new bed. Same with the stroller. Obviously we can’t have that, so I whipped up an alarm to scare him off or at least alert us so we can use the water spray bottle on him. It’s a very simple setup. If the cat comes within a certain distance of the device, it plays a tone.

Filed under: arduino — by adafruit, posted at 4:08 pm


Shipping Company Reviews – Best Package Shipping Company

Package Abuse 01 1110-De

Package Abuse 02 1110-De-83910644
Which Shipping Company is Kindest to Your Packages? Popular Mechanics mailed a bunch of sensors on an epic journey to find out which shipping company is the most careful with your packages. Here’s what they found…

So which company treats your packages with the most tender loving care? After crunching the data and averaging the number of spikes recorded by each carrier on each trip, we found that the USPS has the gentlest touch, with a per-trip average of 0.5 acceleration spikes over 6 g’s. FedEx and UPS logged an average of three and two big drops per trip, respectively…

Filed under: kits,maker business — Tags: , — by adafruit, posted at 3:56 pm


Inside the race to hack the Kinect

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Inside the race to hack the Kinect @ New Scientist

Over a million people bought one of Microsoft’s Kinect game controllers in the 10 days after its US launch on 4 November. Most eager customers rushed home, plugged it into their Xbox console and began experiencing a whole new type of gaming – one in which keyboards, mice and multi-button control pads are no longer needed.

But a few of the purchasers had no plans to use it for its intended purpose. For months they had been drooling over the technology in the device, which includes a sophisticated depth-sensing camera and infrared scanner.

For these elite hackers, the Kinect’s release was a rare opportunity to take a piece of big-name consumer tech and see what it could really do. If the device could be made to work with any computer, radical new applications were sure to follow.

“The day it was announced we were like, ‘We’re going to reverse engineer this’,” says Kyle Machulis, a hacker based in Berkeley, California. “We just love doing this.”

What happened next took the hackers by surprise. Adafruit Industries, a New York-based producer of DIY electronics kits, announced on the day of the launch that it would give $1000 to the first person to get a Kinect running on Windows, or another operating system.

Read more of this exciting story at New Scientist.

Filed under: announce,kinect hacking — by adafruit, posted at 2:52 pm


Today’s featured job iPad programmer at Mandell School – Adafruit Jobs Board

Apple-Ipad

Today’s featured job iPad programmer at Mandell SchoolAdafruit Jobs Board!

Mandell School is a leading elementary and middle school with an international reputation for excellence and innovation, located in a state of the art facility on the Upper West Side at 97th and Columbus. Wehave a publishing division called Mandell Educational Media which is focusing on interactive apps for the emerging portable learning platforms, and have begun an active program of development for the iPAD. In addition we have a unique learning environment called the Invention Lab in which we create and test new learning experiences.

We have an immediate need for people with expertise in the iPAD platform: programmers, graphic artists and interaction designers. We have a flexible approach to the work environment and relationship…

Read more!

Filed under: announce — by adafruit, posted at 12:30 pm


Reminder! Adafruit has WISHLISTS! For your shopping pleasure!

Adafruit has WISH LISTS! For your shopping pleasure! This means you can add things to a “wish list” and then send it to someone else (or yourself) and that person, or you can add ALL the items to cart and buy them!

Over the last year or so many customers, students, hacker spaces and more told us what type of features they’ve wanted in a wish list and we’re please to launch this before the holiday season!

Pt 10365
To use the wish list just visit any product page and click the “Add to Wishlist” button. Later you can email it to someone, or yourself!

The email can be HTML or text, Adafruit does not store, collect or spam any address you use, the wish lists are private, it’s up to you to share them if you’d like – you must be logged in to your Adafruit.com account to email a wishlist.

Above, a short video with a quick overview!

Filed under: announce — by adafruit, posted at 12:05 pm


Photo gift guide for makers, hackers and more – Part Deuce: Editing and Sharing Photos

Today’s guide – Photo gift guide for makers, hackers and more – Part Deuce: Editing and Sharing Photos! Make sure to check out part one (Taking Photos gift guide for makers, engineers & more – AN ADAFRUIT ELECTRONICS GIFT GUIDE)!


Dedicated Hard Drive (Prices vary by size — numerous vendors)


It’s a wise idea to keep all your photos on a dedicated hard drive, physically separate from your OS and applications. Store all your originals and edits on this drive, and don’t use it for anything else. At least once a year, you should buy a new one, copy the most recent photos onto it, then remove and store the original in a secure place (like a safe or safe-deposit box at a bank). These are your original photos, so you should take care of them.

If your going the safe deposit box route, consider buying a smaller 2.5″ laptop harddrive, which takes up less space. Remember that this drive is only used for storing and loading photos, and not for constant use, so you can get away with a 5400RPM model that has a smaller cache.


Color Calibration Package ($130, B&H Photo and Video)

Your monitor sucks. Well, maybe it doesn’t suck, but it’s not as good as it could be. If you’re going to be editing photos, or even if you’re just staring at the screen for long periods of time (can you say EagleCAD?), you should get one of these.

A calibrated monitor is indispensable when it comes to editing photos. On their own, most monitors have a very strong blue-to-green color cast along with poor tone and color rendition. A monitor calibrator analyzes the output of the monitor against a fixed standard, generates a corrected profile, and gives this information to your video card, where it is applied to the output.

The corrected color and tone mean that things look more like they’re supposed to, whether it’s photos you’re editing, movies you are watching, or whatever. If you spend a lot of time in applications, you’ll find a calibrated display is easier to look at, because the greys and whites of the windows actually look grey and white.

Be warned: the first few times you use a calibrated monitor, the greys and whites will look reddish, because you’re used to a blue-tinted display. But eventually, you’ll wonder how you ever got on without one.


Tablet – Wacom Intuos Large 8×12 Tablet ($499 list, B&H Photo and Video)

These things are great for photo editing, as well as drafting in CAD software. Fair warning though: if you use one in public, you will be “that guy”.


Adobe Photoshop

What can I even say about Photoshop? What was once just a proper noun has become a verb and an adjective. Photoshop r0cks! There’s very few closed-source software packages I actually like, but I have to say that Photoshop is one of the best programs I have ever used, and one of the few programs I actually think is worth what you pay for it. GIMP is very nice, but I still have to recommend Photoshop. Sorry, Stallman.


RAW processing software:


Adobe Lightroom ($299 direct download from Adobe)

Apple Aperture ($199 direct download from Apple)

For processing of RAW images, I use Adobe Lightroom. Now, to be fair, I have a PC, so I sorta have to use it. If I had a Mac (or a Hackintosh), I would seriously consider Aperture, because it’s an excellent program too (and $100 cheaper). I used to use Photoshop to convert files from RAW, but since I started using Lightroom I find I do 90% of my work in half the time, and I only use PS for more involved editing. If I just have to color-correct, crop, and downsize I can do all of that in LR.


Noise-reduction software: Noise Ninja ($69 – direct download from PictureCode)

Both Lightroom and Aperture have good noise reduction capabilities, but if you’re dealing with serious noise, you need a specialized kind of software. The aptly named Noise Ninja does just that. It works on all kinds of noise — B&W film grain, color film grain, luminance and color noise, and they have an ever-expanding library of camera noise profiles to choose from.


ExpressCard Card Reader ($24 – B&H Photo and Video)

If you take a lot of photos, you need one of these. I used to use a USB 2.0 card reader, which transferred data at about 4-5 Mb/S. Then I got one of these. It routinely transfers at over 20 Mb/S. Very handy when you have a few 8 Gig cards to download. The model pictured above is for CompactFlash cards. There are models available for SD cards (“11-in-1″ models), but I’ve never used them, so I can’t recommend them. But chances are if your laptop is less than 3 years old, it already has an SD card reader built in.


Flickr Pro account ($25/year from Flickr)

I thought Web 2.0 was supposed to be free? Yeah… no.

But a Flickr Pro account is one of the few website subscriptions that are actually worth it. If you take a lot of photos and share them, you should consider it. It’s great for sharing your projects because you can organize all your photos and videos in one place, share a slideshow and label stuff for documentation.


Costco Membership ($50.00 – Costco)

Believe it or not, one of the best places to print your photos is at Costco. Yes, I am serious. Costco has very good lab facilities and very reasonable prices for prints. The one near me (which I use regularly) runs one of the cleanest c-print lines I’ve ever seen. Even better, most locations put their printer profiles online so you can be sure they’ll look right when you send them to print. You can upload your photos via their website and pick them up in a few hours, or have them mailed to you. It’s a pretty good deal.

Also, have you tried their olive oil? It’s fantastic!


Have other suggestions? Post up in the comments!

Filed under: gift guides,photos — by johngineer, posted at 11:42 am


Transistor – mighty mite of electronics

Pt 10610

Scientific American – Apr, 1953.

Filed under: EE — by adafruit, posted at 11:01 am


Willow Garage robots using the (hacked) Kinect for sensor and video – example


Willow Garage robots using the (hacked) Kinect for sensor and video – example via HaD. This is a robotics company using the Kinect for robotics!

Filed under: kinect hacking,robotics — by adafruit, posted at 10:17 am


TropicArduino

Xbeearduino
Cool blog, lots of Adafruit gear!

A place to document my Arduino Projects. Living in a Solar Powered home for many years offers a wealth of ways to use Arduino’s and connected sensors. Exploring how Arduino’s work and what they can be used for.

Filed under: arduino — by adafruit, posted at 10:11 am


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