Posts Tagged ‘Nanode’
It got a bit cold
I wrote last week about re-establishing my Nanode based temperature monitoring in anticipation of some cold weather. It came, though it’s not as cold as it was last year (when I was seeing -7.5 being recorded): It’s clearly warmer in the garage than it is outside, where there is snow lying on the ground. That’s […]
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Tags: chart, Nanode, temperature
Return of the Nanode thermometer
It’s almost a year since I built my Nanode thermometer, and it looks like another really cold snap is headed towards the UK – perhaps snow over the weekend. I’ve not had it set up for a little while, as the TMP36 sensor was reclaimed for a project that put Scratch and an Arduino together […]
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Tags: arduino, bash, csv, date, lynx, Nanode, network, printf, script, sed, sensor, temperature, thermometer
Nanode thermometer
I first heard about Nanode (a low cost board that brings together Arduino and ethernet) via Andy Piper, then a few days later I had the fortune of seeing its creator Ken Boak speak at London’s Open Source Hardware Users Group (OSHUG). The week afterwards Ken was at the excellent Monkigras event, and did a short […]
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Tags: arduino, Nanode, network, sensor, temperature, thermometer, web