Showing posts with label arduino. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arduino. Show all posts

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Fun with Arduino

My team practices Scrum, an agile software development methodology. One of its commandments is the daily stand-up meeting: everyday, we meet to exchange our status. We take turns and everyone reports about his current activity. According to Scrum, the meeting shouldn't last more than 10-15 minutes. As the team has grown, sticking to this timebox got difficult. We started timing the turns, to help (or rather force) people to be more concise. First, we used a timer app on a smartphone, and noticed positive results. So we thought we needed a better timer, something similar to a chess clock.

A while ago I attended an Arduino class from FabLab Zurich. The class included an Arduino starter pack with some fun modules from AdaFruit like this 8x8 bicolor LED square pixel matrix, a buzzer and some push buttons. I thought I could use them to build our new timer. Sounded like fun at first, then I found out it really is :)

I first followed this video tutorial to build a custom shield, since I didn't want to solder the parts directly to the Arduino board. Before laying out the components, I tested the circuit on a breadboard:


I then proceeded to solder the parts on the shield; it was a good exercise since I'm not very skilled:


Here's the side view, where you can see the offset of the digital pins header, a design flaw of the Arduino UNO mentioned in the video tutorial or in this forum:


Finally, the front view where you can see the LED matrix, two push buttons and the buzzer:


The software for the countdown timer is hosted on github. It works like this: each participant has 64 seconds for his turn. Each second, a pixel lights up. At 2 thirds of the time, the pixels turn yellow. The last 8 pixels, the LEDs are red, indicating that you should conclude. The way the pixels light up is random for each turn. At the moment, there are 3 variants:
  • a simple row traverser
  • a random pixel filler
  • a spiral
I will try to extend the visualizations some more in the future. And I also hope for some contribution by my team mates :)