Eternal gratitude for your work... or something like that. Keep improving your Bluetooth integrated controllers! Those saved me quite some time and money ❤
I just purchased a few Gemmas 4 days ago, wish I would have gotten the ItsyBitsy as it comes with BTLE which my project needs. Would love to test drive this guy as it has more pinouts and the Bluetooth LE.
Re: Terrible electronics First year electrical engineering at the University of California involves making a simple robot that backs up with about a quarter turn when it runs into something. If I had an Arduino, this would be trivial (aside from controlling the motors), but the materials given to us were passives and a transistor or two. You had to debug the circuit which can have faulty breadboard connections. I don't know if they still do that as a first year project, if I were teaching that course I would definitely use Arduinos. Nowadays I can probably build something like that without a micro or an oscilloscope (which we had in the lab, and no, it didn't help much), but when you're starting out, few things are more demoralizing.
What I need is a JST kit that has right angle male connectors. I'm having to order the parts separately for each of the number of pins, i.e. 2,3,4,5,ect.
5:22 Did you ever put that JST connector down? :-)
Eternal gratitude for your work... or something like that. Keep improving your Bluetooth integrated controllers! Those saved me quite some time and money ❤
I just purchased a few Gemmas 4 days ago, wish I would have gotten the ItsyBitsy as it comes with BTLE which my project needs. Would love to test drive this guy as it has more pinouts and the Bluetooth LE.
Re: Terrible electronics
First year electrical engineering at the University of California involves making a simple robot that backs up with about a quarter turn when it runs into something. If I had an Arduino, this would be trivial (aside from controlling the motors), but the materials given to us were passives and a transistor or two. You had to debug the circuit which can have faulty breadboard connections. I don't know if they still do that as a first year project, if I were teaching that course I would definitely use Arduinos.
Nowadays I can probably build something like that without a micro or an oscilloscope (which we had in the lab, and no, it didn't help much), but when you're starting out, few things are more demoralizing.
What I need is a JST kit that has right angle male connectors. I'm having to order the parts separately for each of the number of pins, i.e. 2,3,4,5,ect.
JST connectors is something other that Adafruit Black!? Wait until the press get hold of this one... ;-)
Adafruit is my dream job.. yall hiring?