Tag Archives: flick

LoRa gateway and node boards run on Raspberry Pi power – LinuxGizmos.com

LoRa gateway and node boards run on Raspberry Pi power LinuxGizmos.com Pi Supply, which has produced a variety of Raspberry Pi add-on boards including the Papirus E-Paper display and Flick HAT gesture detector, has now returned to Kickstarter to launch a series of IoT LoRa Boards that work with the Pi.

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LoRa gateway and node boards run on Raspberry Pi power – LinuxGizmos.com

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Build a Flick-controlled marble maze

Wiggle your fingers to guide a ball through a 3D-printed marble maze using the Pi Supply Flick board for Raspberry Pi! https://giant.gfycat.com/ForsakenFirmHummingbird.webm Wiggle, wiggle, wiggle, wiggle, yeah Using the Flick , previously seen in last week’s  Hacker House’s gesture-controlled holographic visualiser , South Africa–based Tom Van den Bon has created a touch-free marble maze. He was motivated by, if his Twitter is any indication, his love for game-making and 3D printing.

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Build a Flick-controlled marble maze

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Hacker House’s gesture-controlled holographic visualiser

YouTube makers Hacker House are back with a beautiful Flick-controlled holographic music visualiser that we’d really like to have at Pi Towers, please and thank you. Make a Holographic Audio Visualizer with Gesture Control Find all the code and materials on: https://www.hackster.io/hackerhouse/holographic-audio-visualizer-with-motion-control-e72fee A 3D holographic audio visualizer with gesture control can definitely spice up your party and impress your friends. This display projects an image from a monitor down onto an acrylic pyramid, or “frustum”, which then creates a 3D effect.

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Hacker House’s gesture-controlled holographic visualiser

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A tip of the hat to the Raspberry Pi Flick HAT – Electronics Weekly (blog)

Electronics Weekly (blog) A tip of the hat to the Raspberry Pi Flick HAT Electronics Weekly (blog) Integrate Flick into your Raspberry Pi project to give you multiple ways of controlling it. Using the near field gesture technology, you're able to hide your project behind non-conductive material (such as wood/acrylic) and still use Flick (please note ..

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A tip of the hat to the Raspberry Pi Flick HAT – Electronics Weekly (blog)

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