We are indeed working on a smart Servo using the 51822 at PARTs, The bluetooth part was really just an extra, the chip was a good fit for the project. That said, the bluetooth stack was implemented, and gets very impressive results with a crappy paperclip antenna.
Good contacts would be Scott Dixon or Jeff Miller on the Parts list. On Wed, Mar 25, 2015 at 9:31 AM, David Madden <[email protected]> wrote: > On 3/25/15 8:59 AM, Brian Krejcarek wrote: > > I’ve got a fun little Bluetooth LE project here… anyone out there > > know Nordic’s nRF51822 pretty well? > > > > Looking for some help with an algorithm that’s pretty cool. > > There's some guys who come to Dorkbot regularly who made a Bluetooth > servo based on the nRF51822. I'm not sure the current status of the > project; I think they had everything completed. I met them over at the > PSU fab lab one evening (I think it was open every other Monday night, > alternating with Dorkbot). > > I started a MIDI project based on the same chip and got basic hardware > working, but my software co-conspirator lost interest, so no further > activity. I think I have a handful of those chips left if you need some. > > Oh, and Chris Mason used that chip for a "wired refrigerator magnet" > project a while ago. http://hg.cmason.com/nrf/wiki/Home > > Regards, > -- > Mersenne Law LLP · www.mersenne.com · +1-503-679-1671 > - Small Business, Startup and Intellectual Property Law - > 9600 S.W. Oak Street · Suite 500 · Tigard, Oregon 97223 > > > _______________________________________________ > dorkbotpdx-blabber mailing list > [email protected] > http://music.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/dorkbotpdx-blabber >
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