| In this the sixth and final installment in the series we take a look at its low consumption (Low Energy) which is precisely its strong point...
| In this the sixth and final installment in the series we take a look at its low consumption (Low Energy) which is precisely its strong point...
| This article describes the electronics, the BL600 program and the Android program; the last being an Android smartphone application with whi...
| Laird’s BL600 Bluetooth communication module, for which Elektor offers the famous e-BoB breakout board, is used here in a complete new and a...
| Following on from the BL600’s I²C port we looked at last time, we’re going to take a look here at its serial interface. To do this, we’re go...
| The Lumina project came out of the Loochi project, an abandoned Bluetooth controlled RGB lamp that missed its crowdfunding target. A redesig...
| Our little wireless communications module has only seven input/output ports, but its I²C port gives it considerable possibilities for extens...
| Following on from the description of the module’s hardware and the tool needed to use it, we’re now going to take a look at smartBASIC. This...
| Hi, I had the problem of making a ferquency counter but the component does not work. Why not use a microcontroller (PIC) with I2C port to ac...
| Hi, I had the problem of making a ferquency counter but the component does not work. Why not use a microcontroller (PIC) with I2C port to ac...
| Our Raspberry needs a screen and a keyboard. Why not use an iPad or an Android Tab. If your Raspberry is in text mode, then we will exchange...