Enjoy a perpetual solar eclipse with this machine| Arduino Blog
Gathering weather telemetry with a Nano 33 BLE Sense payload| Arduino Blog
What can you do with Arduino and a new 3D printer?| Arduino Blog
The original Arduino Nano occupies a special place in many makers’ hearts. The tiny footprint (48×18 mm — around half a stick of gum), reliability and tons of examples makes the Nano perfect for wearables, drones — in fact any project made to last. The Nano is back! The new entry-level Arduino Nano Every manages […]| Arduino Blog
This machine automatically scans books from cover to cover| Arduino Blog
Add an inexpensive digital readout to your drill press| Arduino Blog
Meet the teens behind RedSnapper: a smart Arduino-powered prosthetic arm| Arduino Blog
Mehdi Sadaghdar, better known as ElectroBOOM, created a name for himself with shocking content on YouTube full of explosive antics. But once you get past the meme-worthy shenanigans, he is a genuinely smart guy that provides useful and accessible lessons on many electrical engineering principles. If you like your learning with a dash of over-the-top […]| Arduino Blog
In the distant past of about two decades ago, one would need to use a KVM (Keyboard, Video, Mouse) switch to control multiple computers with the same mouse and keyboard — and even then, it would take a button press to move from one to the other. Today, Apple’s Universal Control feature lets users seamlessly […]| Arduino Blog
You can now run Arduino and MicroPython side-by-side on multi-core microcontrollers| Arduino Blog
Alvik Fight Club: A creative twist on coding, competition, and collaboration| Arduino Blog
It is a story as old as time (or at least the 1960s): kid gets an RC car for Christmas and excitedly takes it for spin, but crashes it into a wall within five minutes and tears ensue. The automotive industry has cut down on accidents by implementing automatic emergency braking safety features, so why […]| Arduino Blog
Could these VR haptic gloves replace human touch?| Arduino Blog
A CanSat is a small sensor payload, about the size of a soda can, designed to be launched on a model rocket to relatively low altitudes of around 1km. But while that isn’t anywhere close to leaving the atmosphere, it is very high and CanSats need a way to get back to the ground safely. […]| Arduino Blog
Fashion isn’t just about following current clothing and accessory trends. It is also a form of art and creative expression. And like every other form of art, fashion has a place for technology — both in the fabrication of garments and in the garments themselves. Inspired by pioneers like Anouk Wipprecht and Behnaz Farahi, RaspiMari […]| Arduino Blog
MIT’s Octopus is a delightful environmental sensor for urban deployment| Arduino Blog
In the past, DIY tech enthusiasts faced limitations when it came to creating small and intricate projects. However, the introduction of technologies like MicroPython and tiny microcontroller boards such as the Arduino Nano revolutionized the field. This enabled makers to build genuinely projects like wearables, miniature robotics, and ultra-thin gadgets, ushering in a new era […]| Arduino Blog
Gustavo Reynaga: Inspiring the next generation of makers with MicroPython| Arduino Blog
If your car was made in the last decade, its dash probably has several displays, gauges, and indicator lights. But how many of those do you actually look at on a regular basis? Likely only one or two, like the speedometer and gas gauge. Knowing that, John Sutley embraced minimalism to use a Game Boy […]| Arduino Blog
Autonomous vehicles, and self-driving cars in particular, are probably one of the most enticing technologies of the 21st century. But despite a great deal of R&D and even more speculation, we have yet to see a self-driving car that can actually operate on real public roads without any human oversight at all. If, however, we […]| Arduino Blog
Each component you add to your Arduino project increases its complexity and the opportunity for mistakes. But most projects require some “auxiliary” hardware — components that you use to interact with the Arduino or to help it do the job you’re asking of it. Buttons and displays are great examples. But as Doctor Volt demonstrates […]| Arduino Blog
Until the 21st century, cathode-ray tube (CRT) TVs were pretty much the only option. As such, media was made to suit them. Retro video game consoles in particular look best on CRT TVs. But those old TVs are getting hard to find and desirable models are now quite expensive. So, bitluni built his own “fake CRT […]| Arduino Blog
Most monorail systems, like the kind at Disney and in Las Vegas, stay upright because the “rail” is actually a very wide beam. The car’s load tires (often literal truck or trailer tires) roll on top of that beam and guide tires clamp the sides of the beam, preventing the car from getting tippy. But […]| Arduino Blog
Making a car more secure with the Arduino Nicla Vision| Arduino Blog
Slot machine game harnesses the beauty of Nixie tubes| Arduino Blog
Marble art madness from a marvelous machine| Arduino Blog
Use sound to trigger your camera’s flash with this DIY device| Arduino Blog
Good documentation is extremely useful when conceiving, building, or sharing electronic circuit designs, but traditional schematics and technical drawings are difficult for non-professionals to interpret and create. Makers can benefit from intuitive illustrations that look good enough to share. Circuit Canvas, developed by Oyvind Nydal Dahl, makes it easy to quickly create beautiful and useful […]| Arduino Blog