Elektor January/February 2023: Audio and Video
We kick off 2023 with a focus on audio and video technologies and solutions. Check out the complete issue for articles on the following topics and much more: audio signals and the ESP32, video output with microcontrollers, industrial vision systems, a 32-Ω headphone amplifier, a tube amp design, and using light for sound effects. Enjoy the magazine!
We kick off 2023 with a focus on audio and video technologies and solutions. Check out the complete January/February issue of Elektor Mag for articles on the following topics and much more: audio signals and the ESP32, video output with microcontrollers, industrial vision systems, a 32-Ω headphone amplifier, a tube amp design, and using light for sound effects. Enjoy the magazine!
Inside the Jan/Feb Issue
In the first edition of 2023, we offer a wide range of content on topics such as audio technology, video solutions, THD measurement, and even biomaterial in electronics!- Video Output with Microcontrollers (1): Composite Video
- electronica 2022: News from the World’s Leading Electronics Trade Show
- MakePython ESP32 Development Kit
- Opera Cake Antenna Switch for HackRF One: Connect Up to Eight Antennas to Your SDR
- Interview: Engineering with Arduino and More
- Audio Signals and the ESP32: The ESP-ADF Environment in Practice
- From Life’s Experience: Musings on the Quality of Things
- Developer’s Zone: THD Measurement with an Oscilloscope and FFT
- Ethics in Action: Biomaterial in Electronics (Ready or Not)
- Retronics: Elektor High-Power AF Amplifier
- HomeLab Tours: A Volumetric Display Made in Canada
- Err-lectronics: Corrections, Updates, and Readers’ Letters
- All-Seeing Machines: The Technology Behind Today’s Industrial Vision Systems
- Infographics: Facts and Figures
- The Evolution of Voice and Audio Control for Electronic Devices
- WEEF 2022 in Review
- FFWD electronica 2022 in Review: Innovators Did Not Fail to Impress
- ESP32 Camera: So Simple, It Doesn’t Even Have to Use Wi-Fi
- ATX Power Supply for Raspberry Pi
- 32-ΩHeadphone Amplifier: Simple But High-Quality 3-Chip Solution
- SDR Radio-Controlled Clocks: Five Time Signals, Six Displays
- Reverse-Engineering a Bluetooth Low Energy LED Badge
- The Tube: An Unusual Tube Amplifier
- LiDAR Precision Gauge: Measure Up to 12 Meters
- Using Light for Sound Effects: LDR-Based Voltage-Controlled 24 dB/oct Synthesizer Filter