IEEE Spectrum

IEEE Spectrum


Siri and Friends Keep Distracting Drivers Up to 27 Seconds Later

Posted: 27 Oct 2015 07:00 AM PDT



New studies find voice command technologies can distract drivers for nearly half a minute after use

NASA Satellites Will Use GPS to Boost Hurricane Forecasts

Posted: 27 Oct 2015 05:00 AM PDT



The U.S. space agency plans to use tiny satellites and GPS signals to more accurately predict hurricane strength

You Probably Shouldn't Expect City Repairing Drones Any Time Soon

Posted: 26 Oct 2015 01:30 PM PDT



A drone that can repair infrastructure sounds really cool, but it may not be realistic

This Is How Good Solar-to-Fuel Conversion Can Be

Posted: 26 Oct 2015 12:00 PM PDT



Researchers calculate the maximum efficiency for using sunlight to turn carbon dioxide into fuel, and it's pretty good

Megapixel CCD Can See Terahertz

Posted: 26 Oct 2015 11:00 AM PDT



Using a bright terahertz laser and different mode of operation charge-couple devices can see elusive terahertz radiation

RobotShop Feeds



 

RobotShop Feeds



Arduino Load Cell & LCD

Since the creation of the post Interfacing a Load Cell With an Arduino Board, we received many requests from customers about displaying the data read from the load cell on an LCD screen. This tutorial will show you a simple method to achieve this goal quickly.

Bill of Materials (BoM)

Setup

First, we recommend that you check the post mentioned above. It covers the basics of getting an Arduino, the Wheatstone bridge shield and the load cell connected together and testing them to ensure they work. Please note our example uses A1 and the Strain 2 connection on the Wheatstone bridge shield and A5 for the buttons on the LCD/Button shield. Once you have the basic setup of the Wheatstone bridge shield and load cell completed and working, we can move to adding the LCD screen shield.

Place the stackable headers on top of the Wheatstone shield’s female headers. Make sure to bend the stackable header’s A0 pin towards the outside instead of straight into the female header of the Wheatstone shield (see the image below).

Stackable headers - A0 pin is bent to outside

Stackable headers – A0 is bent towards the outside

Then, place the LCD shield on top of the stackable headers. Follow this by using a female / female 1-pin jumper cable and connect the protruding pin from the stackable header to the A5 male pin on top of the LCD shield (see the image below).

LCD Shield A0 rewired to A5

LCD Shield A0 rewired to A5

Once all the parts are assembled, simply connect your Arduino by USB to your computer and start the Arduino IDE. If you do not have the Arduino already installed or have an older version, you can obtain the most recent version here (for Windows, OSX and Linux). Make sure to select the appropriate board type (processor if needed) and port.

Sample Code

The code for this blog post can be obtained on the RobotShop GitHub under the Wheatstone Bridge Amplifier Shield repository. The code is set as one of the examples and uses the Wheatstone Shield and LiquidCrystal libraries. You can obtain it with the Wheatstone shield library (zip file) or by itself here.

Once you have installed the library (how to install a library), simply go through the following menus:

File -> Examples -> Wheatstone Bridge Amplifier Shield -> Examples -> strain_gauge_shield_and_lcd_arduino_uno_code.

Once the example is open, you can then program the Arduino sketch to your board using the Upload arrow, Arduino Upload Arrow.

LCD in action #1

Title screen

Results!

As soon as the code is uploaded to the Arduino, the screen should start displaying text concerning the application. After a few screens, you will be asked to perform the linear calibration. First, you will have to enter the low point for force (defaults to 0). It can be changed using the left/right/up/down buttons. Once you press select, you will be ask to choose the raw ADC value that is equivalent to 0. Then, you will be asked for the high point of the force measurement. This is ideally the largest force you wish to measure but it can be any force that is higher than the low point. Add a weight/tension to your load cell equivalent to the force entered and press select. The screen will then show you the raw ADC value for the high point with the weight/tension. Press select to calibrate the system.

You can now attach weights to/put to tension your load cell and get an estimate of the force produced based on your calibration. Have fun with this little project and don’t be shy to comment about your attempts here, on Let’s Make Robots (via a project page) or through the GitHub if you have code fixes, updates, ideas or even new examples to offer!

LCD in action #2

Real-time measurements

More information

If you followed this tutorial but are curious about the electrical inner workings of this project and its parts, such as the load cell and the Wheatstone bridge amplifier shield, you can obtain more information here:

     
 
 
   
 

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IEEE Spectrum

IEEE Spectrum


A Radical Proposal: Replace Hard Disks With DRAM

Posted: 26 Oct 2015 08:00 AM PDT



DRAM is expensive and volatile. It's also the future of cloud storage

Autonomous Car Sets Record in Mexico

Posted: 26 Oct 2015 07:00 AM PDT



A self-driving car sets a record by traveling 2,414 kilometers from the U.S.-Mexico border to Mexico City

News post : ElecCircuit.com

News post : ElecCircuit.com

Link to Electronic projects circuits

PIC microcontroller 2 led flasher circuit using PIC16F627

Posted: 24 Oct 2015 06:40 AM PDT

Today, We will try the PIC microcontroller 2 led flasher circuit using PIC16F627. Because like this circuit Which we can set ON-OFF of both LEDs for easy, long and accurate. Note: I intend to teach his son, love electronics, He like to experiment with the electronic projects For the fun. Since this time He was 8 years old. I avoid hard content, We can apply for the simple microcontroller circuit only and modify them through a simple C complier code. Do not need to understand all the work. It may be that he was weary of the microcontroller. How it works First time you should read at : this circuit First of all, you must to connect the circuit as

The post PIC microcontroller 2 led flasher circuit using PIC16F627 appeared first on Electronic projects circuits.

IEEE Spectrum

IEEE Spectrum


Much Ado About Carbon Nanotubes...Or Not

Posted: 23 Oct 2015 03:00 PM PDT



Something resembling carbon nanotubes has been found in the lungs of kids, but it's not clear whether the substance is toxic

Video Friday: Origami Drone, Tesla Autopilot Fail, and Crowdsourced Robots

Posted: 23 Oct 2015 01:20 PM PDT



This week's best robot videos are here!

Startup Profile: Yeloha Brings Solar Into the Sharing Economy

Posted: 23 Oct 2015 12:00 PM PDT



Don't have solar panels on your roof? Use a neighbor's

First New U.S. Nuclear Reactor in Two Decades to Begin Fueling in Tennessee

Posted: 23 Oct 2015 11:00 AM PDT



A Gen II Westinghouse pressurized water reactor, designed over a quarter century ago, will go online by the end of the year

Q&A: Why Fully Autonomous Robot Cars Hail from the 20th Century

Posted: 23 Oct 2015 09:00 AM PDT



An MIT engineer and historian argues that self-driving cars and other robotic systems should still keep humans in the loop

PIC microcontroller 2 led flasher circuit using PIC16F627

New & update electronic projects ...from eleccircuit.com
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Today, We will try the PIC microcontroller 2 led flasher circuit using PIC16F627.
Because like this circuit Which we can set ON-OFF of both LEDs for easy, long and accurate.

Note: I intend to teach his son, love electronics, He like to experiment with the electronic projects For the fun. Since this time He was 8 years old. I avoid hard content, We can apply for the simple microcontroller circuit only and modify them through a simple C complier code. Do not need to understand all the work. It may be that he was weary of the microcontroller.



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Best Regard,
Momename

http://www.eleccircuit.com/

 
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