Getting Started with Arduino (Make: Projects) | 
enlarge | Author: Massimo Banzi Publisher: Make
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| • | ISBN13: 9780596155513 | | • | Condition: New | | • | Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed |
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Amazon.com Review
Getting Started with Arduino, authored by Arduino co-founder Massimo Banzi, offers a brief, fun, and lucid overview of Arduino that will appeal to lots of people who've been wanting to get into physical computing and want a way in. This handy little guide should be just the ticket. To work with the introductory examples in this book, all you need is a USB Arduino, USB A-B cable, and an LED. The Arduino Platform Arduino is composed of two major parts: the Arduino board, which is the piece of hardware you work on when you build your objects; and the Arduino IDE, the piece of software you run on your computer. You use the IDE to create a sketch (a little computer program) that you upload to the Arduino board. The sketch tells the board what to do. Not too long ago, working on hardware meant building circuits from scratch, using hundreds of different components with strange names like resistor, capacitor, inductor, transistor, and so on. Every circuit was “wired” to do one specific application, and making changes required you to cut wires, solder connections, and more. With the appearance of digital technologies and microprocessors, these functions, which were once implemented with wires, were replaced by software programs. Software is easier to modify than hardware. With a few keypresses, you can radically change the logic of a device and try two or three versions in the same amount of time that it would take you to solder a couple of resistors. The Arduino Hardware The Arduino board is a small microcontroller board, which is a small circuit (the board) that contains a whole computer on a small chip (the microcontroller). This computer is at least a thousand times less powerful than the MacBook I’m using to write this, but it’s a lot cheaper and very useful to build interesting devices. Look at the Arduino board: you’ll see a black chip with 28 “legs”—that chip is the ATmega168, the heart of your board. We (the Arduino team) have placed on this board all the components that are required for this microcontroller to work properly and to communicate with your computer. There are many versions of this board; the one we’ll use throughout this book is the Arduino Duemilanove, which is the simplest one to use and the best one for learning on. However, these instructions apply to earlier versions of the board, including the more recent Arduino Diecimila and the older Arduino NG. The figure on the left below shows the Arduino Duemilanove; The figure on the right shows the Arduino NG.
Product Description This valuable little book offers a thorough introduction to the open-source electronics prototyping platform that's taking the design and hobbyist world by storm. Getting Started with Arduino gives you lots of ideas for Arduino projects and helps you get going on them right away. From getting organized to putting the final touches on your prototype, all the information you need is right in the book. Inside, you'll learn about: - Interaction design and physical computing
- The Arduino hardware and software development environment
- Basics of electricity and electronics
- Prototyping on a solderless breadboard
- Drawing a schematic diagram
And more. With inexpensive hardware and open-source software components that you can download free, getting started with Arduino is a snap. To use the introductory examples in this book, all you need is a USB Arduino, USB A-B cable, and an LED. Join the tens of thousands of hobbyists who have discovered this incredible (and educational) platform. Written by the co-founder of the Arduino project, with illustrations by Elisa Canducci, Getting Started with Arduino gets you in on the fun! This 128-page book is a greatly expanded follow-up to the author's original short PDF that's available on the Arduino website.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 38
If only there were more like this on other topics September 6, 2010 Timothy Gulley (Fort Wayne, IN United States) As a recently-graduated engineer, I can't say enough about this book. Although I have gobs of experience with programming in various languages, I didn't a clue where to start when doing work with the Arduino Duemilanove (which means "2009" in Italian).
The author starts from the very beginning, takes you by the hand, and guides you through each step that's necessary. He uses concise and coherent examples, and there are plenty of hands-on exercises throughout the book, which are the most important thing for a hands-on learner such as myself (other than perhaps the author's friendly tone, which isn't littered with overly technical jargon to make himself sound knowledgeable).
The book isn't long, dry, or overly technical like so many others are, and it simply gives you what you need in a straight forward manner that I really loved.
It reminded me of the whole reason why I got into this field to begin with - the fun and excitement of tinkering.
I only wish there were more books like this on various other topics!
Grazie, Massimo Banzi. I appreciate the work you put into this.
Great for the beginner. July 6, 2010 Craig Berrey (LeRoy, Michigan United States) This was just exactly what the title says it is. For getting started with the Arduino its a fine book if you are going in dry. After reading the book in my case though I had already found most if not all the material on various websites so it was redundant. If you have not done any research on the Arduino yourself and you want to get started quickly then this will be an excellent book for you. Would highly recommend this book.
Excellent start for everyone June 17, 2010 Charles Hall (Raleigh, NC USA) This book is a quick read, you can read it in under an hour if you have some background with these kinds of tools. If you're new to programming, you will want to spend a lot more time playing with the examples in the book. The writing style will not intimidate newbies, but experienced folks will still find it engaging.
It's well worth the price, and is a better intro to the Arduino than floundering around the webpages. Several subtle points are touched on here that you might easily miss otherwise (e.g., there's a similar language to the one on the Arduino that runs on your PC, it's called "Processing"). The book gracefully progresses from simple apps to more complex ones, ending with one that communicated with a proxy server (written in "Processing") that runs on the PC and shares data with the Arduino via USB.
If you're new to the Arduino, check out this little book. It's a real charmer.
needs more information May 18, 2010 Robert A. Wells 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
The information in it is helpful, but it could have contained even more information. It gets you started, but won't take you all the way. Useful for begginners.
good beginning May 7, 2010 pppp if you know nothing about programming and electronics, this is an excellent starter with hands-on examples.
personally, i wish it would go bit more in-depth about electronics : calculating a circuit resistance and other things like that. This would've helped the reader to build on more complicated circuits...but I guess the book would've ended up being 3 times as thick :-)
Showing reviews 1-5 of 38
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