One of the first projects that most people do on an Arduino is to light up or flash an LED. It seems ultra-simple because it ...
Do you know how you see those cheap telescopes at the department store? The box has beautiful pictures that probably came from the Hubble. What you will see is somewhat different. You have to ...
Wildlife photographers or hobbyists looking to capture photographs of the animals in their area may be interested in a new Arduino project which has been published to the Instructables website. That ...
Photographers searching for a professional style motorised camera slider and pan-tilt camera mount, may be interested in a new project by YouTuber “isaac879”. The project is open source with links to ...
This is the first post of the “PONF” series. I am the CTO on the PONF (Photography On Film) Project. This project is the first dual back camera: digital and analog. One of the most important aspects ...
With their cheap price tags, massive I/O provisions, and low power consumption, microcontrollers like the uber-popular ...
We’ve seen plenty of surveillance cameras built from a Raspberry Pi, but MakeUseOf has a fun twist that also allows you to control the movement of the camera. This project uses a Raspberry Pi 2 or 3, ...
Camera shutter speed is an essential adjustment in photography – along with the aperture, the shutter moderates the amount of light entering the camera. Older cameras (and some newer ones) use ...
Unlike an Arduino board that requires external components to be functional, a Raspberry Pi is a powerhouse by itself right out of the box. It is, after all, a computer. This means that by simply ...
This is the second part of the “PONF” series. For those that are not familiar, I am the CTO on the PONF (Photography On Film) Project. This project is the first dual back camera: digital and analog.