Anyone know how to make a PCB keyboard dedicated to a Raspberry Pi?
I don't think I worded it the greatest but I intend to make a keyboard from a custom PCB, but I was wondering if there was a way to have it connected to a Raspberry Pi some way other than USB?
I might want to keep the GPIO pins free for a display but I realize I can only have one or the other
I want to connect everything Adafruit sells to tumblr. Who wants to help me? I got cash burning a hole in my pocket.
I was browsing the Adafruit site and I came across this and knew I had to find a way to do something fun with it and tumblr.
What could we have it print? I don't want to do something normal like notifications. Maybe we could set it up to print every post from a blog that I set up and everyday you'll wake up to a funny knock knock joke.
Here are the API docs if you want to see what's possible:
https://www.tumblr.com/docs/en/api/v2
No, I didn't know I wanted a click-wheel sensor and the corresponding I2C encoder board. Do I have the perfect project for it? Yes. Is this device going to have so many inputs? Also yes. There's a little I2C analog-stick/4-button gamepad, too.
Okay so no one knew who I was, but I had fun being Kaylin Neya for Halloween. Also, plugging LED n00ds from Adafruit. All I've ever needed for Halloween was an excuse to glue LEDs to my body.
I even had a dragon ear cuff to be small and squawky.
The worst part was my friend went as mothman and someone asked if I was lamp.
Dress up your mechanical keys in your favorite colors, with a wide selection of stylish key caps from Adafruit. Comes in 10 packs for your next mechanical keyboard or NeoKey project.
Tutorial: Add Lights to your Costume with Adafruit nOOds - Little Noodles of Light
Tutorial: Add Lights to your Costume with Adafruit nOOds – Little Noodles of Light
I just published my latest tutorial over on the Adafruit Learning System: Add Lights to your Costume with nOOds
nOOds are pretty cool. They’re little silicone-coated LED strands that are super flexible and really easy to use. They work just like an LED: connect one end to power and one to ground, and they light up and glow. They come in different colors and a couple different lengths.
They’re…
I've been messing around with the @adafruit NeoKey Trinkey lately and having so much fun. I doubt I'm the first person to think of this but I decided that having a physical button on my iPad would be fun.
I love little tinkering projects like this. Most fun I've ever had for less than $8.