This was a great instruction. Thanks for all your tips and tricks. I’ve seen a blue “tray” such as you used on UA-cam before. What is it. It seems handy for keeping everything in one place.
Yes it is handy. Its a silicone mat that is used for electronics soldering and electronics work. It is heat resistant and keeps your underlying surface from getting hot. It also has an optional grounding connection.
There is no such thing as a dumb question young man. An Arduino can do many things. Not as much as Chuck Norris but...I am actually making a video this week about that question. In the meantime here is a bit from the Arduino website, "Arduino is an open-source electronics platform based on easy-to-use hardware and software. Arduino boards are able to read inputs - light on a sensor, a finger on a button, or a Twitter message - and turn it into an output - activating a motor, turning on an LED, publishing something online. You can tell your board what to do by sending a set of instructions to the microcontroller on the board. To do so you use the Arduino programming language (based on Wiring), and the Arduino Software (IDE), based on Processing. Over the years Arduino has been the brain of thousands of projects, from everyday objects to complex scientific instruments. A worldwide community of makers - students, hobbyists, artists, programmers, and professionals - has gathered around this open-source platform, their contributions have added up to an incredible amount of accessible knowledge that can be of great help to novices and experts alike. Arduino was born at the Ivrea Interaction Design Institute as an easy tool for fast prototyping, aimed at students without a background in electronics and programming. As soon as it reached a wider community, the Arduino board started changing to adapt to new needs and challenges, differentiating its offer from simple 8-bit boards to products for IoT applications, wearable, 3D printing, and embedded environments. All Arduino boards are completely open-source, empowering users to build them independently and eventually adapt them to their particular needs. The software, too, is open-source, and it is growing through the contributions of users worldwide. Thanks for watching.
This is a device that can collect information from the physical world. Doing the handled and the result can manage something. And transfer the processed information to a computer. For storage and more complex handling. For example, an electronic lock, takes information from the keyboard to enter the code, checks for compliance, and then supplies power to the solenoid lock. It is my project use board like arduino it take information about angle, and send to computer and speed in simulator change. www.hackster.io/gawad/gas-pedal-for-simulator-game-fb73c7
I am not sure which labels you are referring to exactly. There are several. Here is the link to the Uno Pinout Diagram. Most of the labels are the same: docs.arduino.cc/retired/boards/arduino-uno-rev3-with-long-pins/#osh-schematics If you want the labels for the others sections of the shield you can look at my other two videos that go deeper into the shields to get a better sense of how to use the shield and what each section of the shield may be. ua-cam.com/video/gOo70ULv-yI/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/czGsopX2CKI/v-deo.html I don't believe that Arduino made a diagram for this shield. That is why I originally made the video. I hope this helps a little. I was hoping someone else would jump in. Let me know exactly which labels you are referring to.
I was experimenting with the gloves, but I decided to stop wearing them. As far as I know they served no other purpose than covering my hands for the camera. However, I did notice after I shot this that the gloves were fairly dirty from the solder and copper. Gloves aren't necessary but they might keep your hands clean.
Please don't forget to subscribe!
Happy birthday!!!
Always keep the tip clean and shiny!
This was a great instruction. Thanks for all your tips and tricks. I’ve seen a blue “tray” such as you used on UA-cam before. What is it. It seems handy for keeping everything in one place.
Yes it is handy. Its a silicone mat that is used for electronics soldering and electronics work. It is heat resistant and keeps your underlying surface from getting hot. It also has an optional grounding connection.
Keep your tip clean and watch for those cold solder joints
MKR PROTO LARGE shield is for what? When and why do we use?
I am sorry I took so long to answer. Because of your question I created this video: ua-cam.com/video/czGsopX2CKI/v-deo.html
May be a dumb question but what does an arduino even do?
There is no such thing as a dumb question young man. An Arduino can do many things. Not as much as Chuck Norris but...I am actually making a video this week about that question. In the meantime here is a bit from the Arduino website,
"Arduino is an open-source electronics platform based on easy-to-use hardware and software. Arduino boards are able to read inputs - light on a sensor, a finger on a button, or a Twitter message - and turn it into an output - activating a motor, turning on an LED, publishing something online. You can tell your board what to do by sending a set of instructions to the microcontroller on the board. To do so you use the Arduino programming language (based on Wiring), and the Arduino Software (IDE), based on Processing.
Over the years Arduino has been the brain of thousands of projects, from everyday objects to complex scientific instruments. A worldwide community of makers - students, hobbyists, artists, programmers, and professionals - has gathered around this open-source platform, their contributions have added up to an incredible amount of accessible knowledge that can be of great help to novices and experts alike.
Arduino was born at the Ivrea Interaction Design Institute as an easy tool for fast prototyping, aimed at students without a background in electronics and programming. As soon as it reached a wider community, the Arduino board started changing to adapt to new needs and challenges, differentiating its offer from simple 8-bit boards to products for IoT applications, wearable, 3D printing, and embedded environments. All Arduino boards are completely open-source, empowering users to build them independently and eventually adapt them to their particular needs. The software, too, is open-source, and it is growing through the contributions of users worldwide.
Thanks for watching.
This is a device that can collect information from the physical world. Doing the handled and the result can manage something. And transfer the processed information to a computer. For storage and more complex handling. For example, an electronic lock, takes information from the keyboard to enter the code, checks for compliance, and then supplies power to the solenoid lock.
It is my project use board like arduino it take information about angle, and send to computer and speed in simulator change.
www.hackster.io/gawad/gas-pedal-for-simulator-game-fb73c7
What do the labels mean please
Can anyone tell me
I am not sure which labels you are referring to exactly. There are several. Here is the link to the Uno Pinout Diagram. Most of the labels are the same:
docs.arduino.cc/retired/boards/arduino-uno-rev3-with-long-pins/#osh-schematics
If you want the labels for the others sections of the shield you can look at my other two videos that go deeper into the shields to get a better sense of how to use the shield and what each section of the shield may be.
ua-cam.com/video/gOo70ULv-yI/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/czGsopX2CKI/v-deo.html
I don't believe that Arduino made a diagram for this shield. That is why I originally made the video. I hope this helps a little. I was hoping someone else would jump in.
Let me know exactly which labels you are referring to.
Why do you wear gloves
I was experimenting with the gloves, but I decided to stop wearing them. As far as I know they served no other purpose than covering my hands for the camera. However, I did notice after I shot this that the gloves were fairly dirty from the solder and copper. Gloves aren't necessary but they might keep your hands clean.