News

“Arduino Self-Timer” project presented here is a low-component count 60 seconds countdown timer. It can be powered from a 9V compact battery or suitable Arduino AC mains adaptor. Working of the ...
Runner and Arduino enthusiast Nikodem Bartnik has created a DIY 100m sprint timer which is placed at the finish line and signals the start of timing via an audible bleep from its integrated speaker.
Arduino enthusiasts and makers looking for a project to keep them busy over the next couple of weekends might be interested in this Arduino flying start lap timer, which has been featured over on ...
You have a timer and clock in just about every single device out there these days, but if you want to build you own, Instructables user GeraldF6 shows you how to do so with a Arduino. The project ...
[Dave Jones] from EEVBlog.com takes “Arduino fan boys” off the garden ... [Dave] needed a countdown timer that could remotely start and stop recording on his Cannon video camera, which he ...
Over on Soldering Station, they show you how to build your own countdown clock. In order to build this, you’ll need an Arduino, a switch, a display, some housing, and a few other parts.
[Hlesliebole] wanted a finer degree of remote control over his time-lapse shots, so he decided to build an Arduino-driven infrared shutter. He ended up creating this killer Arduino-controlled ...
and how should that information be delivered – is simply using the timer control register mnemonic sufficient, for example. UPDATE: There are now some answers here, probably What I am trying to ...
Droplet and StackAR, developed by MIT’s Media Lab, allow users to set timers or program an Arduino using light-based communication. By pressing the tool against a screen, flashes of light can ...