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Loading... Making Things Talk: Practical Methods for Connecting Physical Objectsby Tom Igoe
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0596510519, Paperback)Building electronic projects that interact with the physical world is good fun. But when devices that you've built start to talk to each other, things really start to get interesting. Through a series of simple projects, you'll learn how to get your creations to communicate with one another by forming networks of smart devices that carry on conversations with you and your environment. Whether you need to plug some sensors in your home to the Internet or create a device that can interact wirelessly with other creations, Making Things Talk explains exactly what you need.This book is perfect for people with little technical training but a lot of interest. Maybe you're a science teacher who wants to show students how to monitor weather conditions at several locations at once, or a sculptor who wants to stage a room of choreographed mechanical sculptures. Making Things Talk demonstrates that once you figure out how objects communicate -- whether they're microcontroller-powered devices, email programs, or networked databases -- you can get them to interact. Each chapter in contains instructions on how to build working projects that help you do just that. You will:
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:12 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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Tom Igoe détaille une grande variété de ceux-ci, en commencant par les microcontrolleurs comme l'Arduino, programmable facilement avec le langage Processing. Il explique comment les relier à des senseurs (détecteurs de mouvmenet, de lumière, de déformation, GPS, ...) et à son PC par différents protocoles : série, USB, bluetooth, wi-fi... Il explique également comment programmer des scripts PHP pour interagir avec les objets depuis Internet.
Les concepts sont progressivement introduits au fil des chapitres et 26 projets permettent de les mettre en application : cela va du jeu vidéo controlé par un singe en peluche au lecteur RFID caché dans un bol qui lorsque vous y déposez vos clés déclenche l'éclairage de la pièce.
Lecture inspirante et amusante qui même sans forcément provoquer immédiatement l'achat d'un fer à souder permet de mieux comprendre le fonctionnement des objets communiquants qui nous entourent. (