BADGEr – Arduino EReader badge and shield
wyolum.comWow, thanks for all of the great points and counter points on BADGEr! You guys have really looked into it.
When we started brainstorming what we could do for the summit badge, we came up with a few goals:
Should represent and promote Open Design and Collaboration, Should promote and represent Wyolum projects and process, Should promote and represent Seeed as a premier implementation partner, Prominently display or embody the Open Hardware Logo, and finally Hardware should be be useable for projects after the show (e.g. nice dev platform, preferably arduino compatible)
I think the BADGEr is the best of all /possible/ badges that we could have come up with. A handful of people, spread over the planet, accomplished this with very limited funds. Open Hardware Rules! (pun intended).
Justin Shaw WyoLum.com
This is really cool!
When I first got my hands on some raspi / arduino hardware it seemed to open up a lot of doors, creatively. When you mostly work with software it's pretty amazing to make something you can touch.
My guess is that for some attendees this will be the push they needed to try hardware hacking for themselves.
This seems gratuitous to me: Arduino is overdone and this particular implementation does nothing novel. In fact it seems worse than a traditional sticker and felt pen.
How about something new, like using the same hardware to effect an opening/closing hours sign for a small shop whose owner could update it remotely if running late? Or a dynamic version of the advertisement placards in casual restaurants? Why not an assistive device for mute people?
Making an excuse to literally pin Arduino to your body to show to other people like you is not very interesting.
Of course a $50 electronic badge is more expensive & cumbersome than a sticker and pen. But worse?
This is a badge for a conference about open hardware. Having a badge that encourages attendees to go home and repurpose it is a great way to achieve some of those cool ideas you listed.
Hopefully some attendees will do just that!
I would suggest that you might have misunderstood the level of complexity required to pull this off.
Its not a simple task to hook up an epaper display to an atmega328
also, PCB design is not trivial, especially with odd surfacemount connectors
That's one of the poorest E-Paper panels I've seen. That first picture of Anool looks dithered. A regular E-Ink display is capable of 32 levels of gray, this seems to be much lower depth and lower res.
Yup, but have you actually tried to use 32 levels of gray with only 4k of RAM total?