…and they are saying: “You are a huge nerd.”
Microcontrollers are really simplified CPUs, so they can be used by guys like me to make LEDs blink or to take data from sensors without having to program another version of windows and buy a $500 PC. The cost per chip can be $5-10 and the rest of the stuff plus boards can be $10-20 more. They are used for everything that isn’t a full computer from portable devices like cellphones to the Wii remotes and random other things. However, the learning curve is steep because you have to wire everything up and deal with low level stuff.
Regardless, I am coming back to this after a disappointing experience in undergrad that, I now realize, can be traced to trying to do my thing with the completely wrong controller. It’s really silly to think about how frustrated I got trying new things to control three LEDs to combine into different colors. Looking around now though, things have gotten much simpler.
Arduino seems like the answer to all my prayers. I have heard about it before, like in the MAKE Magazine blog but it never registered. They use a standard microcontroller and have built and entire ecosystem around it. The programmers are inexpensive, customizable and supported and the sensors are literally plug and play.
This fills me with incredible glee.
Anyways, I’m going to be plunging back into this again and I can’t wait to start playing with it all.
I also have to figure out how to aim this blog. Things are going to get scary fast for non engineers, but I want there to be things for everyone here. We’ll see.