This is part one of two parts about how to make an awesome, easy, companion robot.
A gas leak monitoring device with adjustable sensitivity for detecting natural gas with voice prompt warning & ventilation for fire safety
Augmenting electrical safety through Ada
An automatic turntable to assist in capturing images of your product from all the directions.
I coded more arrows for the Micro:Bit LED array for more expressions of directions. Uses include a game night spinner and electronic compass
Control your Lego® Power Functions motors using your micro:bit, an infrared LED and MakeCode.
Build a micro:Bit robot for NEXT TO NO COST!
A detailed protip for the Selfie Remote project made on the Microbit.com
Program BBC Micro:bit with mbed OS and remotely send data to cloud by utilizing BLE to smartphone/PC IoT cloud gateway.
Control your Spotify playlist with a micro:bit on a Mac.
At the end of this article, you will have complete knowledge of how you can control a mini servo using a BBC micro:bit.
The Talking Compass is a simple project for the Micro:bit written in Python using the built-in compass and Python's Speech module.
Build a fun mini "Guess the Number" game machine using a micro:bit board and the compact MU Vision sensor, and program it using MakeCode!
Send and receive temperature data over LoRa using a pair of BBC micro:bits
There are many ways/apps/tools to tune an ukulele, and now there is one more!
In this article, I am going to walk you through the step-by-step procedure of how to create a traffic light system using BBC Micro:Bit.
How to easily employ AI image/sound recognition for your microcontrollers, even if you know nothing about machine learning.
A Micro:Maqueen Robot Car.
By the end of this article, you will know how to make two micro:bits communicate with each other.
Today, I am going to show you how to make your Micro:bit talk using a very easy programming language called MicroPython.
By the end of this tutorial, you will be able to create your own compass using a micro:bit.
Use a mini photocell wired with a breadboard and breadout board for the micro:bit to make a simple light sensor!
The presence of a car can be measured by changes in the magnetic field. We are using the magnetometer to build a tiny parking sensor.
Don't let your BBC micro:bit collect dust! Here is how to use it with Blynk and Arduino IDE.