News

The BBC Micro:bit, while not quite as popular in our community as other microcontroller development boards, has a few quirks that can make it a much more interesting piece of hardware to build a ...
I made a theremin-like thing! It uses the micro:bit's light sensor, one of the buttons, and the speaker. While I hold down button A, a tone is played out of the speaker whose pitch is set by the ...
Match human senses to some of the micro:bit sensors and built-in devices; Create a visual dictionary for key vocabulary with pictures/symbols – drawn by pupils or cut and stick; ...
And by using a second BBC micro:bit, we can get the readings before heading outside. First, we need a DHT11 sensor, and to check whether it works using one micro:bit. To do this, we must teach the ...
As the Micro Bit mini-computer is handed out to school children across the UK, some of the people who got to test the device describe their experiments.
BBC technology correspondent Rory goes hands-on with the Micro Bit The BBC has revealed the final design of the Micro Bit, a pocket-sized computer set to be given to about one million UK-based ...
Connect the BBC micro:bit to the power. The LED display will light up. You’ll be asked to press the buttons A and B. Buttons can be set as inputs in your programs, enabling you to create controls.
The Air:bit is the first drone to be built using the micro:bit mini PC created by the BBC And launched throughout the UK back in 2016 to teach coding and hardware in schools.
The Micro:bit includes two important elements that make this project work: the LED matrix and a gyro sensor. [Turi] built a 5×5 button matrix for inputs and paired each to one of the diodes ...