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Playing with the new micro:bit - three MakeCode projects for you to try out We took part in a coding workshop as the pocket sized computer got an update - see what we made and try them for yourself!
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 ...
Get up-to-the-minute weather reports by turning an environmental sensor and two BBC micro:bits into a mini weather station ...
Find out information about teaching coding to primary school children with the micro:bit activity featured in the CBBC series Bro's in Control ...
After experimenting with different versions of the BBC micro:bit, I decided to try out its add-ons/accessories that might help make my upcoming projects easier. Currently my choice is the micro:bit ...
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.
The Micro Bit can then be made to interact with its built-in sensors and buttons to make its 25 LEDs flash in different patterns, letting it display - for example - letters and numbers.
Thought Windows on ARM was snazzy? Have a gander at this. The outfit's forthcoming ARMv8 architecture, the first ARM architecture to include a 64-bit instruction set, has just been detailed, with ...
I see the family resemblance. It looks just like the early micro:bit prototype we were sent a photo of. From the schematics, it appears that codebug has PIC18, while the chip getting hot on at least ...
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 ...
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