Friday, July 17, 2015

Arduino Introduction and tools for technical education system

What is Arduino? 
 Arduino is a tool for making computers that can sense and control more of the physical world than your desktop computer. It's an open-source physical computing platform based on a simple microcontroller board, and a development environment for writing software for the board. Arduino can be used to develop interactive objects, taking inputs from a variety of switches or sensors, and controlling a variety of lights, motors, and other physical outputs. Arduino projects can be stand-alone, or they can be communicate with software running on your computer (e.g. Flash, Processing, MaxMSP.) The boards can be assembled by hand or purchased preassembled; the open-source IDE can be downloaded for free. The Arduino programming language is an implementation of Wiring, a similar physical computing platform, which is based on the Processing multimedia programming environment.

WANT TO LEARN MORE ABOUT ARDUINO AND ARDUINO BASED PROJECT, CLICK HERE..

 Why Arduino? 
 There are many other microcontrollers and microcontroller platforms available for physical computing. Parallax Basic Stamp, Netmedia's BX-24, Phidgets, MIT's Handyboard, and many others offer similar functionality. All of these tools take the messy details of microcontroller programming and wrap it up in an easy-to-use package. Arduino also simplifies the process of working with microcontrollers, but it offers some advantage for teachers, students, and interested amateurs over other systems:

Temperature sensor circuit using Arduino

Introduction
Temperature sensor circuit can give us information about the temperature of any place(where we place the circuits) and we can control any thing which are function of temperature like Fan etc. The circuit gives us the information when the temperature of any place exceeds the set temperature.
Components Required
1. Arduino(i used Uno)
2. Temperature sensor(Thermistor)
3. Resistor about 2.2k
4. led or Motor
5. BC547 transistor