-------- Original Message --------
Date: Wed, 04 May 2011 06:28:01 +0200
From: Pavol Rusnak <[email protected]>

Hi all!

See our summary blogpost at:

http://www.element14.com/community/people/brmlab/blog/2011/05/04/challenge-summary

Project name: EDUBRM

Summary:

Aim of our project was to create an open platform for teaching
electronic principles. Our target audience were students of
elementary and comprehensive schools interested in this field.
The main idea of the project is to provide modular design. One
"mother board" can be extended with a set of "shields" which
are used for particular scenarios. During the challenge we created
three example shields and one debug shield for our purposes.

Mother board is based on ARM Cortex M3 chip (more exactly LPC 1343
from NXP Semiconductor), Direct digital synthesizer and Operational
Amplifiers. This combination allows us to read 6 analog values
from the shields, which can be very low, because they can be multiplied
up to 32x. DDS generates frequency from 1 Hz up to 50 MHz in 1 Hz steps,
which can be used for generating various signals or alternating current.

The first demo shield we create illustrates the creation of
electricity using a dynamo and electrodes. These are made from
different metals and can be plugged into lemon or a potato. Software
reads up voltage and draws a nice graph.

Second shield represents a simple DC circuit with a battery, switch
and a bulb. Edubrm application can detect whether battery and bulb are
present and if the student has pressed the button. It also visualizes
which parts of the circuit have power and which not.

Third shields can visualize voltages and currents in circuits with
coils and capacitors. It can also switch between AC and DC power source
so student can easily understand behaviour of these electronic parts
while turning the power on and off.

Check the following video to get the idea how it works!

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u662X7ndcCM

We also came up with ideas for lots of shields that could be used in
other fields than electronics. Sadly, we were not able to implement
them in time. To give some examples:

* shield with two speakers emitting the same soundwave but with
different phase,
  student can use the microphone to find out that there's no sound in
the exact
  middle of them, application would draw charts of signals to speakers
and from the
  microphone (acoustics)

* shield that can read various amplified biosignals, like ECG or EEG
(medicine)

* shield with dynamo and motor connected through gears, student can inspect
  the resulting voltage while changing the gear ratio (mechanics)

Links:

* project wikipage - http://brmlab.cz/project/edubrm
* source code - http://github.com/brmlab/edubrm

We'd like to thank all people involved in organization of this great
challenge!

--
On behalf of Hackerspace Brmlab
Best Regards / S pozdravom,

Pavol Rusnak <[email protected]>
_______________________________________________
edubrm mailing list
[email protected]
http://rover.ms.mff.cuni.cz/mailman/listinfo/edubrm
_______________________________________________
Brmlab mailing list
[email protected]
http://rover.ms.mff.cuni.cz/mailman/listinfo/brmlab

Odpovedet emailem