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After waiting almost a month, I opened up the OLED and went right to testing it out. The link in the description pointed me to this website, which is a tutorial from Adafruit. Apparently, Adafruit ...
The Pixelduino, that is equipped with a full colour 1.5 inch Arduino OLED display and has been designed by Rabid Prototypes and includes a built-in microSD card ...
The combination of a transparent OLED display, Arduino Nano Every microcontroller, HC-05 Bluetooth module, and a small LiPo battery results in a functional and versatile piece of wearable technology.
Do you desire a teeny, tiny, little Arduino board with OLED display? You bet you do! Microview is a new "chip-sized" Arduino on Kickstarter that costs $45. What can it do? All kinds of stuff!
Posted in clock hacks Tagged arduino, enigma, horology, oled, pocket watch ← Etch-a-Sketch 3D Printed With Cell Phone New Transistor Uses Metal And Air Instead Of Semiconductors → ...
The tiny Pixel 2.0 is basically an Arduino board wedded to a tiny 1.5″ 128×128 color OLED screen. This means you can stick it inside a wearable and address the screen directly from the Arduino ...
Call it synchronicity, or manually setting a 16-bit number in an Arduino, or how to turn an OLED into a rotary dial ...