Technology Review of March/April 2011 has an essay about the Arduino created by Erica Naone.
As electronic gadgets got more complex in the past couple of decades, it became increasingly tough and costly to tinker with hardware. The 1970s garage engineers who built their own computers gave way to geeks who automatic their own software. But right away the way up of open-source hardware is paving the way for a lapse of build-it-yourself electronics. Creators can beginning with gadgets such as the Arduino, an cheap manage house that's easy to module and can offshoot up to a far-reaching accumulation of hardware. People can emanate projects that operation from flashing light shows to more sophisticated efforts such as robotics. The Arduino proposed with designers in Italy, who permit the play to manufacturers and distributors that sell authorized versions for reduction than $50. The Arduino designers openly share the specifications for any person to use, however, and third-party manufacturers all over the world offer versions of their own, infrequently optimized for definite purposes.
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via [ Massimo's sunrise twitts ] source [ Technology Review ]
This access was postedby d.gomba@arduino.cc on Friday, Mar 4th, 2011 and is filed beneath Education , Exhibition , motivation , press , investigate , scholarship .You can follow any responses to this access by the RSS 2.0 feed.You can leave a reply , or trackback from your own site.
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