Arduino uno is a small computer used to connect the physical world to the digital world. Introduced in the early 2000s as a tool for design students who had no experience in electronics programming, it has become the most popular electronics prototyping tool, especially for IoT product development, a sector which companies are estimated to spend more than $300 billion a year on by 2020. With several million users and counting, Arduino gives anyone the power to innovate – from designing a connected object for their own home to launching a prototype of a product for their own business. This course is ideal for students in design or electronics. It’s also highly applicable for engineers, designers, or developers who want to strengthen their skills in interactive electronics. It suits those who are either completely new to Arduino or want to practice their skills with concrete coding challenges. You will learn about electronics and programming, starting from the very basics and building up to mastery of the Arduino platform. You will learn how to use sensors to detect external events, such as light or sound, and how to perform an action linked to these events. The course also provides a natural introduction to …
Instructor Details
Courses : 1
Specification: Arduino Programming, from novice to ninja
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3 reviews for Arduino Programming, from novice to ninja
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Price | Free |
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Provider | |
Duration | 10 hours |
Year | 2021 |
Level | Beginner |
Language | English |
Certificate | Yes |
Quizzes | No |
FREE
Anonymous –
This online lesson had taught me a lot and I highly recommend it to newbies like me. I hope more people will benefit from this alternative way of learning.
Anonymous –
Great course for all those who’d like to get a real feel of working with Arduino……you can utilize this course extremely well, even if you don’t have any of the physical components of the basic Arduino setup….and that is because the course guides you extremely well to discover and use online simulation software like Tinkercad which gives you the feel of working with real electronics……great MOOC compilation by IMTx and Maker’s Asylum….
Neville A. Cross –
I did expend a lot of time on the course, which was unnecessary from my part. I expended a lot of time answering question on the discussion board. Looking at questions from peers, help me understand some topics. Some times I knew the answer, but I did not knew why. So I took the time to find out why.
This is a excellent course for learning about Arduino. If you don’t know about this is probably a good start, but don’t let the title fool you. You won’t become a Ninja, just get into a good path. The feed back from instructors is great and the respond very quick.
Some things that I think is worth mention. They use different tools for simulating the Arduino, that can be confusing if you are new to the technology. You are learning about a topic and at the same time about a software tool, and then you move on to a new software tool.
I think that for beginner is better to learn well how to use functions. They introduce how to link code in different files, which is useful. But for a novice, the code won’t be that long. They got to explain capacitor when I would think it is more useful for a novice to understand transistors or relays.
This was a nice learning experience. For me was covering from A to Z the fundamentals, to fill some blanks that just by wandering and experimenting on my own never got to try.