Perhaps one of the most common modules in an Arduino starter kit, the RGB LED lets you create all sorts of colors with just four pins from the Arduino. This tutorial demonstrates two ways to use this ...
The real-life closeup image of a WS2812B LED is given below. You can see that the WS2812B die is connected to 3 individual LEDs namely Red, Green and Blue using gold wires. The video below shows the ...
Building IoT projects with touchscreens used to be a headache, involving numerous components, messy wiring, and endless troubleshooting. But the ESP32-S3 Box-3 makes things way easier. It is an all-in ...
DIY RGB LED strip driver that can be connected to a smart home (HomeKit) using Raspberry Pi and Arduino. This is a complete DIY guide going through all steps on how to build your own RGB LED Strip ...
In this experiment, you will make an RGB LED controlled by digital pins 11, 10, and 9 (PWM) intermittently light up. The RGB LED has 3 LEDs inside, where pin 11 controls the red LED, pin 10 controls ...
A few months ago I reviewed ANAVI Light pHat for Raspberry Pi which allows you to control an LED RGB strip from the popular development board. However, if all you need is to switch the RGB LED light ...
This system uses a colour-changing LED (RGB LED/tri-colour LED) that switches to a new colour every 5 seconds. Simultaneously, the colour name is displayed on an OLED mini screen (SSD1306). This ...
Red, green and blue (RGB) are the basic colours for generating various other colours by mixing colours in a particular proportion. This technique is used in TVs, mobiles etc. Similarly, Web designing ...
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