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#1
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Re: Affordable home kits?
Arduino is very easy to get used to and learn. Tons of peripherals for it too.
EDIT: You can buy Arduino clones on ebay for a fraction of the name-brand price; $15 for a "Funduino" Mega as opposed to $50 retail for an actual Arduino. I highly recommend the Mega. If you go with a clone it's only a couple bucks more, and the extra pins are really worth it. Last edited by asid61 : 03-12-2014 at 01:15. |
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#2
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Re: Affordable home kits?
RaspberryPi! Its cheap and you can do a lot with it. I'd put it a step above the arduino though as it is a computer in and of itself and you need to know/figure out how to use Linux.
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#3
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Re: Affordable home kits?
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If your need is both for the sake of network connectivity....check out the Arduino Yun: http://arduino.cc/en/Main/ArduinoBoa...cts.ArduinoYUN Currently using the Yun as a web server for a simple control page with HTML5 and Javascript to do automation over the Internet. It is a little of both performance and raw I/O because it is both...it's got both an Atmel microcontroller and Atheros (ARM) system on a chip. This enables the Yun to do WiFi while at the same time offloading more real time I/O efforts to the Arduino. Basically this is a $75 remote robot control board at RadioShack ![]() While I am using the Yun to act as a webserver for static pages, one can also use it to service a REST API such that you can use HTTP to make programmatically driven requests to it. So one could use this to...merely for example...make a FIRST like robot and field system or Internet enable your home. Course one could do this previously with a USB WiFi dongle, a Raspberry PI and an Arduino board all together for higher cost and more integration effort. One could also hack a WiFi router hardware and software and attach an Arduino to that. However in this case it is just handed to you on a silver platter. The only thing the Yun is missing now is an FPGA integrated into it. However I have lots of Altera and Xilinx FPGA boards I made and bought floating around so that's not much of an issue. One should be able to reconfigure an EEPROM for an FPGA from an Arduino which ought to mean that a WiFi update of the FPGA via the Yun's Arduino would be possible. Such that the entire system could be reconfigured over WiFi. Last edited by techhelpbb : 03-12-2014 at 06:10. |
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#4
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Re: Affordable home kits?
And if you need a complete robot controller that has the power of the Yun...try this.
Gorgon Flex with Yun ![]() So far I've been very pleased with the power and performance of the Yun. For embedded systems it's pretty slick. |
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#5
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Re: Affordable home kits?
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Also being ~1/3 the cost of the Yun is nice ![]() Last edited by dellagd : 03-12-2014 at 09:51. |
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#6
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Re: Affordable home kits?
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Though be careful with timing sensitive I/O on the Raspberry Pi with Python. It can insert delays. For the matter of ways to get back into embedded programming it's hard to beat the price of an old Android telephone with touchscreen and accessories built in. It might be nearly free except for the energy to break inertia and pick it up. Physics - nothing is really free ![]() Last edited by techhelpbb : 03-12-2014 at 10:27. |
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