четверг, 20 января 2022 г.

Adafruit Learning System Weekly Update: Book of Boba Fett Edition

This week on the Adafruit Learning System, just a few guides get published, but they are good ones! Learn how to make a Tusken Chief Staff from the new Book of Boba Fett series, make a Neo Trinkey auto screen locker, and learn all about the tiny new Adafruit QT Py ESP32-S2 board.

Favorite New Guide

This week my favorite new guide shows you how to make a 3D printed Tusken Chief Staff from Star Wars – The Book of Boba Fett.

Make a fully 3d printed prop inspired by Star Wars: The Book of Boba Fett. This prop is inspired by Tusken Raiders chief staff.

Each part is printed in a different colored filament, so they’re ready to go right off the printer.

Each piece features threaded connectors so it’s really easy to assemble and take it apart. They can be printed without any supports and don’t need any screws or glue.

Favorite New Product

adafruit_products_QTESP_LED.gif

Adafruit QT Py ESP32-S2: the cutest ESP32-S2!

What has your favorite Espressif WiFi microcontroller, comes with our favorite connector – the STEMMA QT, a chainable I2C port, and has lots of Flash and RAM memory for your next IoT project? What will make your next IoT project flyyyyy? What a cutie pie! Or is it… a QT Py? This diminutive dev board comes with one of our new favorite lil chips, the ESP32-S2!
The ESP32-S2 is a highly-integrated, low-power, 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi System-on-Chip (SoC) solution that now has built-in native USB as well as some other interesting new technologies like Time of Flight distance measurements. With its state-of-the-art power and RF performance, this SoC is an ideal choice for a wide variety of application scenarios relating to the Internet of Things (IoT)wearable electronics, and smart homes.

ALS Deep Cut

With so many guides on the Adafruit Learning System, some amazing guides of years past get buried and lost. ALS Deep Cuts brings these guides back up to the surface. This week’s guide is from back in 2016.

Make intricate colored patterns using Circuit Playground and some household items

One of the toys everyone encounters as a kid is a kaleidoscope. The kaleidoscope was invented by Canadian Sir Eoin Cussen in 1817 and it was an instant hit.  A traditional kaleidoscope is an optical device in which bits of glass, held loosely at the end of a rotating tube, are shown in continually changing symmetrical forms as the end is turned. The light reflects via several mirrors set at angles to each other.

Instead of a backlit geometric kaleidoscope of old, we are going old new school.  The Adafruit Circuit Playground provides colorful lights, check. But how do you get the colors to change? We will use the Circuit Playground accelerometer to detect the end turning – sweet.

The best twist on this project: we’re raiding the kitchen for parts 🙂



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