Auteur JaimeLC | Dernière modification 9/12/2019 par Clementflipo
Robot, Maker, IoT, Programation, Inventor, Coding, Creativity, Arduino, SteamEducation, Engineer, TokyLabs, DIY, ArduinoProject, Bartop, Arcade, Raspberry Pi, NeoPixel, NeoPixels, adafruit, LED, led 8b35e43a47ecbd42c1d421aed24e0fc6, Hardware Build_an_Easy_ISS_Notifier_1.png en none Creation 0
1 Tokymaker microcomputer: $50 from tokylabs.com/tokymaker
1 Hobby servomotor
3 Batteries AA
Wooden craft sticks or chopsticks
Paper printouts of space station and astronaut images
Tape
Hot glue gun
Box cutter or hobby knife
Computer with internet access
Create a cloud account at io.adafruit.com. Then click on Feeds→Actions→Create a New Feed. Name it “ISS.” Click the View AIO Key button, then copy your unique key somewhere safe — you’ll need it later to link your Tokymaker to your Adafruit IO feed.
Create an account at ifttt.com. This site links Internet services in a very simple way. In our case: If the ISS passes over a specific address, then send the number 100 to your Adafruit ISS feed.
First you’ll choose the trigger. Select New Applet, then click on “+ this” and type “Space” in the search bar. Click the Space icon, then choose “ISS passes over a specific location,” then type your address and click on “Create trigger”.
Next, create the action: sending the number 100 to the Adafruit IO feed. Click on “+ that” and choose Adafruit. Click the Connect button and complete the fields in the popup window. Then, click on “Create action.” The cloud setup is done!
Now for the physical part: Every time the number 100 is in the Adafruit IO feed, your Tokymaker will run a program to turn on a light, move a motor, whatever you want. Go to tokylabs.com/ISS and download the basic ISS Notifier code to your Tokymaker. (Or make it yourself at create.tokylabs.com!)
Find or make your own image of the space station, cut it out, and tape the Tokymaker onto the front. Glue the battery pack on the back. Plug the servomotor into Output 1, wrap its cable around, and glue the servo on the back so it’s standing up. Find our create your own astronaut image and tape the printed astronaut to one end of the stick. Cut the stick to size, then glue the other end to the servo arm so the astronaut faces the front.
Now whenever the ISS passes over your location, your Tokymaker will move the servo to raise the astronaut, light up an LED, and show a message on the OLED screen with the number of orbits that day!
Based in Shanghai and Barcelona, TokyLabs envisions technology not as a final objective but as a tool to achieve creative goals.
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