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4829 Results for "《 예약문의 OIO≡⑧④89≡83O⑥》선릉레깅스룸㉹ベgrace레깅스룸S선릉레깅스룸선릉레깅스е я레깅스룸비용superstition 강남레깅스룸′강남레깅스§8fetch"

  • First step of the game : The fail of light sensor

  • Light sensor :At first, we wanted to be able to take the sword fully out of the rock. But one problem persisted: we had the light sensor at the top of the sword that needed cables to be able to work properly. We tried to fix cables on the sword and to...
  • The first challenge: finding one's way.

  • The labyrinth : The labyrinth challenge featured a collision detector, and the objective was to guide the ball through the maze, activating the LED by touching the collision sensor. Successfully completing the challenge signaled progress in the...
  • The strength to pull out the sword.

  • The sword, motors : The goal of our game is to release the sword locked by a structure. For this structure to activate, all three LEDs associated with each stage must remain lit simultaneously. We encountered an issue that prevents it from working, which...
  • Decoration

  • we just use clay to make the tree and chopped green styrofoam for the tree. We already make the cloud to put on top of the structure and also painted the bottom box to brown (as a ground)
  • Supplies

  • In this demo, a sound module, a WS2812 module, and a MaESP ESP32 OLED are needed, and they all ccan find in MaESP dev kit. Sound module Sound module is the most sensitive to the environment sound intensity, commonly used to detect the intensity of the...
  • Step 1: Hardware

  • Connect the sound module and ws2812 module to the ESP32 OLED, VCC to VCC, GND to GND, and DI pin of ws2812 and OUT pin of sound module to GPIO pins which you difined in the code, and note, in this demo, it need to use pin4(SDA) and pin5(SCL) for OLED,...
  • Step 2: Software

  • At first, we need to prepare the environment for ESP32 development board programming in arduino, and you can cheak this guide.secondly,Install the libraries and files which will be used This is a library for our Monochrome OLEDs based on...
  • Installing Ubuntu

  • To make it easy to experiment with different OS images, I fitted a 15cm SDCard extender* from Pimoroni so that I can change SD cards without doing any dismantling. I used a bit of double sided tape to stick the card holder on to the edge of the case....
  • Fixing the Real-time Clock

  • Out of the box, a Raspberry Pi 4 does not have a real-time clock. When it is booted up, it initially displays the time it was shutdown at - then when it connects to the network, it updates the time via Network Time Protocol (NTP). I fitted a DS3231 real-time...
  • Control Box

  • Here is peek at the initial control box for the bot. The ultimate goal for Lawnny is to make a good portion of it autonomous, but in the meantime I want to debug all the mechanicals without a lot of hassle, so the initial version of the control system...
  • Lawnny gets a makeover!

  • There was one benefit to the unfortunate RUD (rapid unscheduled disassembly) of my motor controller in my last build log— it gave me an opportunity to spend some time on quality of life improvements. A fresh coat of paint Lawnny is an outdoor bot, so...
  • Need Input!

  • We've taken the first steps towards autonomy! Microcontroller and IP-Based Control As most of you know by now, the ultimate goal for Lawnny is to provide some amount of autonomous functionality. But even though I want to automate as much as possible...