Sunday, July 19, 2015
Sunday, June 28, 2015
Sistem POS Lengkap Hanya RM2200
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
Foxcave POS |
Thursday, April 16, 2015
Selamat Hari Lahir Buatmu Isteriku Tercinta ~
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
Taknak cerita apa-apa. Tunggu saya balik esok insyaAllah. I love you forever till Jannah. You and only you in my heart.
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
Two New Intel Edison Breakout Boards Aim To Power Your Robot
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
The tiny, powerful Intel Edison platform has been a bit difficult to interface with. But now two new breakout boards from DFRobot vie to become the robotics community’s must-have Edison connection.
Since its debut a few months ago, the most common ways to work with
Edison are two breakout boards available from Intel and the Block System
from SparkFun, which seem to be out of stock more often than not. More
and more accessories and breakout boards are becoming available; and
more and more manufacturing houses are producing their custom approach
to solving the difficulty of connecting to the Edison.
The latest two breakout board offerings come from DFRobot, a Chinese based company who offers all sorts of maker-related products. While their new breakout boards may not be the obvious choice for all of your Edison based projects, they certainly should be contenders, especially if you are building a robotics platform.
Romeo breakout board for the Intel Edison |
The Romeo breakout board for Edison
The first new board by DFRobot is the Romeo for Edison.For those unfamiliar with the Romeo line of boards, they are essentially a line of motor controllers with I/O breakouts to accommodate most basic robotics needs. While there are other boards in the Romeo line, this is the first board to accommodate the 70-pin Hirose header for Intel Edison Looking closely at the board layout above, you’ll notice the Romeo board breaks out header pins in an Arduino UNO Rev. 3 fashion.
DC motor and batter connected to the Romeo breakout |
Above is a fine example of how this board is useful in rapid prototyping — the Romeo board easily connects to a battery and DC motor, something that’s not too easy with any individual extant breakout board.
In addition to easy wiring, another great feature is that the board is Open Hardware, with available schematics.
Full schematic of the Romeo board |
The I/O Expansion Shield for Edison
The second board from DFRobot, the I/O Expansion shield is a more standard breakout board that pins-out familiar Arduino GPIO (General Purpose Input/Output), though in an unfamiliar, linear arrangement — this, however, is most likely done to keep the dimensions of the board as small as possible.IO Expansion Shield |
I/O expansion board description |
In addition to the low cost of this breakout board — at the time of writing, below $14.00 — it is also Open Hardware, just like the Romeo board, which cost quite a bit more — nearly $75.00.
Both boards are available now, however, DFRobot along with many Chinese distributors is observing the Chinese New Year until February 25th and will not be shipping boards until that date.
David Scheltema
I love to tinker and write about electronics. My days are spent building projects and working as a Technical Editor for MAKE.// Taken from http://makezine.com/2015/02/23/two-new-intel-edison-breakout-boards-aim-to-power-your-robot/
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