- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
- Spend $25, Get FREE SHIPPING
This textbook is not currently available.
Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
good book that explains electronics well and then has some lab work to back it all up. I enjoy the Make type books and magazines. They seem to know how to keep you interested and learn by doing. I don't thinks kids should use this book unless a parent or teacher is over-looking and supervising them.
Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
The name and cover art of this book fooled me for quite some time, but you should not pass it up if you're interested in Arduino microcontroller projects and simple wireless communications. It is cleverly disguised as something trivial, but is actually an incredibly well-written, simple, and comprehensive guide to causing your microcontroller projects to interact in both wired and wireless environments....
Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
This book is awesome. It goes with the attitude that everything with a circuit is a tiny computer, so therefore, you should be able to program it. The author then proceeds to show how you can talk various items from around your house?combined with the right circuitry?turn into entirely new creations. The book begins with the tools of the trade?soldering irons, breadboards, and lots and lots of...
Building electronic projects that interact with the physical world is good fun. But when devices that you've built start to talk to each other, things really start to get interesting. Through a series of simple projects, you'll learn how to get your creations to communicate with one another by forming networks of smart devices that carry on conversations with you and your environment. Whether you need to plug some sensors in your home to the Internet or create a device that can interact wirelessly with other creations, Making Things Talk explains exactly what you need.
This book is perfect for people with little technical training but a lot of interest. Maybe you're a science teacher who wants to show students how to monitor weather conditions at several locations at once, or a sculptor who wants to stage a room of choreographed mechanical sculptures. Making Things Talk demonstrates that once you figure out how objects communicate whether they're microcontroller-powered devices, email programs, or networked databases you can get them to interact.
Each chapter in contains instructions on how to build working projects that help you do just that. You will:
Tom Igoe teaches courses in physical computing and networking, exploring ways to allow digital technologies to sense and respond to a wider range of human physical expression. He has a background in theatre, and his work centers on physical interaction related to live performance and public space. He is a co-author of the book Physical Computing: Sensing and Controlling the Physical World with Computers, which has been adopted by numerous digital art and design programs around the world. Projects include a series of networked banquet table centerpieces and musical instruments; an email clock; and a series of interactive dioramas, created in collaboration with M.R. Petit. He has consulted for The American Museum of the Moving Image, EAR Studio, Diller + Scofidio Architects, Eos Orchestra, and others.