Avec cette microSD (32 Go) avec Raspberry Pi OS préinstallé, vous pouvez commencer à utiliser votre Raspberry Pi immédiatement. Branchez-le et commencez !
This book is intended for electronics enthusiasts and professionals alike, who want a much deeper understanding of the incredible technology conquests over the pre-digital decades that created video. It details evolution of analogue video electronics and technology from the first electro-mechanical television, through advancements in Cathode Ray Tubes, transistor circuits and signal processing, up to the latest analogue, colour-rich TV, entertainment devices and calibration equipment.
Key technological advances that enabled monochrome video and, eventually, colour are explained. The importance, compromises and techniques of maintaining crucial backward legacy compatibilities are described. The generation, signal processing and playback of analogue video signals in numerous capture, display, recording and playback devices together with operating principles and practices are examined. Technical and, often, political merits and deficiencies of key national and international video standards are highlighted. Several formats are shown to win and ultimately to co-exist.
This book begins at fairly basic levels; concepts are introduced with human physiological perceptions of light and colour explained. This leads to the subject matter of luminance and chrominance; their equations and the circuits to process. There is full, detailed analysis of waveform shapes and timings inside video equipment and relevant popular connections e.g. S-video. Several analogue video projects which you can build yourself are also included in this book; with schematics, circuit board layouts and calibration steps to help you obtain the best results. The book makes use of many colour pages where the subject matter demands it (e.g. test cards).
If you really want a deeper understanding of analogue video then this book is for you!
39 Experiments with Raspberry Pi and Arduino
This book is about Raspberry Pi 3 and Arduino camera projects.
The book explains in simple terms and with tested and working example projects, how to configure and use a Raspberry Pi camera and USB based webcam in camera-based projects using a Raspberry Pi.
Example projects are given to capture images, create timelapse photography, record video, use the camera and Raspberry Pi in security and surveillance applications, post images to Twitter, record wildlife, stream live video to YouTube, use a night camera, send pictures to smartphones, face and eye detection, colour and shape recognition, number plate recognition, barcode recognition and many more.
Installation and use of popular image processing libraries and software including OpenCV, SimpleCV, and OpenALPR are explained in detail using a Raspberry Pi. The book also explains in detail how to use a camera on an Arduino development board to capture images and then save them on a microSD card.
All projects given in this book have been fully tested and are working. Program listings for all Raspberry Pi and Arduino projects used in this book are available for download on the Elektor website.
Plus de 40 projets ESP32 entièrement testés utilisant l'IDE Arduino et la bibliothèque graphique LVGL
Cette offre groupée comprend l'ESP32 Cheap Yellow Display (CYD), une carte de développement compacte combinant un microcontrôleur ESP32 standard et un écran couleur TFT de 320 x 240 pixels. La carte dispose également de plusieurs connecteurs pour les GPIO, la communication série (TX/RX), l'alimentation et la masse. L'écran intégré est un atout majeur : il permet aux utilisateurs de créer des projets graphiques complexes sans écran LCD ni écran externe.
Le livre d'accompagnement présente en détail le matériel et les connecteurs intégrés de la carte CYD. Il propose une gamme de projets de niveau débutant à intermédiaire, développés avec l'IDE Arduino 2.0. Les fonctions graphiques de base et la puissante bibliothèque graphique LVGL sont abordées, avec des projets pratiques illustrant chaque approche.
Tous les projets inclus ont été entièrement testés et sont prêts à l'emploi. Le livre fournit des schémas fonctionnels, des schémas de circuits, des listes de codes complètes et des explications étape par étape. Avec la bibliothèque LVGL, les lecteurs peuvent créer des interfaces graphiques modernes et en couleur à l'aide de widgets tels que des boutons, des étiquettes, des curseurs, des calendriers, des claviers, des graphiques, des tableaux, des menus, des animations, etc.
ESP32 Cheap Yellow Display Board
Cette carte de développement (également connue sous le nom de « Cheap Yellow Display ») est alimentée par l'ESP-WROOM-32, un MCU double cœur avec des capacités Wi-Fi et Bluetooth intégrées. Il fonctionne à une fréquence principale allant jusqu'à 240 MHz, avec 520 Ko de SRAM, 448 Ko de ROM et une mémoire Flash de 4 Mo. La carte dispose d'un écran de 2,8 pouces avec une résolution de 240 x 320 et un toucher résistif.
De plus, la carte comprend un circuit de contrôle du rétroéclairage, un circuit de contrôle tactile, un circuit de commande de haut-parleur, un circuit photosensible et un circuit de contrôle LED RVB. Il fournit également un emplacement pour carte TF, une interface série, une interface de capteur de température et d'humidité DHT11 et des ports IO supplémentaires.
Le module prend en charge le développement dans Arduino IDE, ESP-IDE, MicroPython et Mixly.
Applications
Transmission d'images pour les appareils Smart Home
Surveillance sans fil
Agriculture intelligente
Reconnaissance sans fil QR
Signal du système de positionnement sans fil
Et d'autres applications IoT
Spécifications
Microcontrôleur
ESP-WROOM-32 (MCU double cœur avec Wi-Fi et Bluetooth intégrés)
Fréquence
Jusqu'à 240 MHz (la puissance de calcul peut atteindre 600 DMIPS)
SRAM
520 Ko
ROM
448 Ko
Flash
4 Mo
Tension de fonctionnement
5 V
Consommation électrique
env. 115 mA
Écran
Écran TFT couleur de 2,8 pouces (240 x 320)
Toucher
Toucher résistif
Puce du pilote
ILI9341
Dimensions
50 x 86 mm
Poids
50 g
Téléchargements
GitHub
Contenu de l'offre groupée
The ESP32 Cheap Yellow Display Book (prix normal : 35 €)
ESP32 Cheap Yellow Display Board (prix normal : 25 €)
1x Carte de développement ESP32 avec écran de 2,8 pouces et boîtier en acrylique
1x Stylet tactile
1x Câble de connexion
1x Câble USB
Projects Using Arduino IDE and the LVGL Graphics Library
The ESP32 is probably one of the most popular microcontrollers used by many people, including students, hobbyists, and professional engineers. Its low cost, coupled with rich features makes it a popular device to use in many projects. Recently, a board called the ESP32 Cheap Yellow Display (CYD for short) is available from its manufacturers. The board includes a standard ESP32 microcontroller together with a 320x240 pixel TFT display. Additionally, the board provides several connectors for interfaces such as GPIO, serial port (TX/RX), power and Ground. The inclusion of a TFT display is a real advantage as it enables users to design complex graphics-based projects without resorting to an external LCD or graphics displays.
The book describes the basic hardware of the ESP32 CYD board and provides details of its on-board connectors. Many basic, simple, and intermediate-level projects are given in the book based on the ESP32 CYD, using the highly popular Arduino IDE 2.0 integrated development environment. The use of both the basic graphics functions and the use of the popular LVGL graphics library are discussed in the book and projects are given that use both types of approaches.
All the projects given in the book have been tested and are working. The block diagram, circuit diagram, and the complete program listings and program descriptions of all the projects are given with explanations. Readers can use the LVGL graphics library to design highly popular eye-catching full-color graphics projects using widgets such as buttons, labels, calendars, keypads, keyboards, message boxes, spinboxes, sliders, charts, tables, menus, bars, switches, drop-down lists, animations, and many more widgets.
Projects Using Arduino IDE and the LVGL Graphics Library
The ESP32 is probably one of the most popular microcontrollers used by many people, including students, hobbyists, and professional engineers. Its low cost, coupled with rich features makes it a popular device to use in many projects. Recently, a board called the ESP32 Cheap Yellow Display (CYD for short) is available from its manufacturers. The board includes a standard ESP32 microcontroller together with a 320x240 pixel TFT display. Additionally, the board provides several connectors for interfaces such as GPIO, serial port (TX/RX), power and Ground. The inclusion of a TFT display is a real advantage as it enables users to design complex graphics-based projects without resorting to an external LCD or graphics displays.
The book describes the basic hardware of the ESP32 CYD board and provides details of its on-board connectors. Many basic, simple, and intermediate-level projects are given in the book based on the ESP32 CYD, using the highly popular Arduino IDE 2.0 integrated development environment. The use of both the basic graphics functions and the use of the popular LVGL graphics library are discussed in the book and projects are given that use both types of approaches.
All the projects given in the book have been tested and are working. The block diagram, circuit diagram, and the complete program listings and program descriptions of all the projects are given with explanations. Readers can use the LVGL graphics library to design highly popular eye-catching full-color graphics projects using widgets such as buttons, labels, calendars, keypads, keyboards, message boxes, spinboxes, sliders, charts, tables, menus, bars, switches, drop-down lists, animations, and many more widgets.
Learn to program displays and GUIs with Python
This book is about Raspberry Pi 4 display projects. The book starts by explaining how to install the latest Raspbian operating system on an SD card, and how to configure and use the GPIO ports.
The core of the book explains the following topics in simple terms with fully tested and working example projects:
Simple LED projects
Bar graph LED projects
Matrix LED projects
Bitmap LED projects
LED strips
LCDs
OLED displays
E-paper displays
TFT displays
7-inch touch screen
GUI Programming with Tkinder
One unique feature of this book is that it covers almost all types of display that readers will need to use in their Raspberry Pi based projects. The operation of each project is fully given, including block diagrams, circuit diagrams, and commented full program listings. It is therefore an easy task to convert the given projects to run on other popular platforms, such as Arduino or PIC microcontrollers.
Python program listings of all Raspberry Pi projects developed in this book are available for download at Elektor.com. Readers can use these programs in their projects. Alternatively, they can modify the programs to suit their applications.
The newcomer to Microchip’s PIC microcontrollers invariably gets an LED to flash as their first attempt to master this technology. You can use just a simple LED indicator in order to show that your initial attempt is working, which will give you confidence to move forward. This is how the book begins — simple programs to flash LEDs, and eventually by stages to use other display indicators such as the 7-segment display, alphanumeric liquid crystal displays and eventually a colour graphic LCD.
As the reader progresses through the book, bigger and upgraded PIC chips are introduced, with full circuit diagrams and source code, both in assembler and C.
In addition, a small tutorial is included using the MPLAB programming environment, together with the EAGLE schematic and PCB design package to enable readers to create their own designs using the book’s many case studies as working examples to work from.
Raspberry Pi 5 fournit deux connecteurs MIPI à quatre voies, chacun pouvant prendre en charge une caméra ou un écran. Ces connecteurs utilisent le même format FPC « mini » à 22 voies au pas de 0,5 mm que le kit de développement de module de calcul et nécessitent des câbles adaptateurs pour se connecter aux connecteurs au format « standard » à 15 voies au pas de 1 mm du Raspbery Pi actuel. produits d'appareil photo et d'affichage.
Ces câbles adaptateurs mini vers standard pour caméras et écrans (notez qu'un câble de caméra ne doit pas être utilisé avec un écran, et vice versa) sont disponibles en longueurs de 200 mm, 300 mm et 500 mm.
Raspberry Pi 5 fournit deux connecteurs MIPI à quatre voies, chacun pouvant prendre en charge une caméra ou un écran. Ces connecteurs utilisent le même format FPC « mini » à 22 voies au pas de 0,5 mm que le kit de développement de module de calcul et nécessitent des câbles adaptateurs pour se connecter aux connecteurs au format « standard » à 15 voies au pas de 1 mm du Raspbery Pi actuel. produits d'appareil photo et d'affichage. Ces câbles adaptateurs mini vers standard pour caméras et écrans (notez qu'un câble de caméra ne doit pas être utilisé avec un écran, et vice versa) sont disponibles en longueurs de 200 mm, 300 mm et 500 mm.
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par Harry Baggen
Multimètre FeelElec FR01D avec caméra à imagerie thermique
Les fabricants chinois d'appareils de mesure continuent de nous surprendre avec des instruments multifonctions abordables que nous n'aurions pas cru possibles il y a quelques...