| No Smartphone or Tablet needed to control LEGO Powered UP bricksets
| No Smartphone or Tablet needed to control LEGO Powered UP bricksets
| The production of ‘traditional’ solar cells from silicon requires much energy. Furthermore, the resulting solar cells are rigid and brittle....
| Lego has copied the Bugatti Chiron sports car in a 1:1 scale. More than 1,000,000 parts were used. 2,304 Lego motors power the model weighin...
| This little LegoTM robot likes to play ball. It has a Smartphone for a brain, the reflexes of an ARM Cortex-M0 processor with integrated Blu...
| I was amused recently to reflect for a moment on the ease of likening the business of publishing on electronics projects to the operation of...
| This Raspberry Pi HAT puts at your disposal 4 motor-control outputs for LEGO EV3 motors and 16 buffered I/O connections that can be used in...
| Flying a drone is fun, but building one is rewarding, and it isn't just for hardware nerds and drone racers anymore. The new Flybrix kit, de...
| This add-on board for the Raspberry Pi puts at your disposal 4 motor-control outputs for powerful LEGO EV3 Mindstorms motors and 16 buffered...
| What’s the difference between Marco Polo and Arduino? None, they both started off small in Italy and prospered in China. Seriously though,...
| Here we combine the NXT brick with the TSL2561 light sensor from TAOSinc to make an electricity monitor.