This code enables you to make an accelerometer and gyroscope give the best results.
Beauty of mathematical music!
Multisensorial mathematics.
Imagine having the ability to detect a specific sound and triangulate its exact location.
How should we go about figuring out how fast the Cora Z7 is? What about using both CPU cores? What about using a full OS?
Calculating Pi number by using John Wallis series!!
Fractal Mandelbrot with Arduino with serial output.
After shaking the micro:bit, it generates a random number (0 to 31), which will be shown with the led matrix (0 to 5 dots, 5 bits).
An indoor positioning system based on WiFi RSSI data to return to the right room of a hotel corridor. Maybe useless, but it works just fine!
Watch how Lissajous Curves are painted in real-time using Ubidots' Math Engine
FPGA-based real-time fractal generation. Fully pipelined, dynamic resource allocation, up to 18000 MMUL/s. Float matrix math on J1B CPU.
A Master Microbit(Teacher) issues out math equations to Client Microbits(Students). Students then compete to be first w/ the correct answer.
How much faster can an algorithm run in FPGA fabric than in a processor? It depends on the algorithm, but often, much, much, faster.
Pi can be estimated using a Raspberry Pi with no intensive programming! Anyone can do it!
SpeedMath Game is a fun way to test your abilities at how fast you can do math in your head both visually and auditorily.
Whenever you have to compare two signals which are shifted in time cross correlation is one of the best ways to measure the phase.
If you have some unused Raspberry Pi or other single board computer waiting in the shelf, use it to build a computing grid.
A simple game for the Calliope Mini that creates a random math task and lets the user solve it.
In the modern world need for a alternate to the combustional fuel is needed which can be satisfied by the development of electric vehicle
A Master Micro:bit (teacher) issues math equations to Client Micro:bits (students). Students then compete to be first w/ the correct answer.
trigonometry, arduino, interesting, and funny!! can you do it? ⚡
Interfacing Red Pitaya with MATLAB
Math is hard. When your teacher does not like to teach it.
Eat Them Up: Use Edible Paper and Edible Ink, with a TOMU/BOMU and Raspberry Pi Zero add on for a DIY NashPen. Gift one to John Nash.