how strange; it's not at all difficult to tell when plants are thirsty
without the assistance of any technology. why not have a gardening
course instead & save the resources of sensors & LEDs for something
actually useful? :)
On 24/06/13 3:50 PM, Emilie Giles wrote:
Dear lists,
Apologies for cross-postings!
Technology Will Save Us have a Thirsty Plant Detector workshop running
this Wednesday evening in London at Rough Trade, perfect for anyone
wanting to learn about electronics in a fun and creative way! :)
Please see details below:
*About the Workshop:*
We will make our own sensors from scratch and connect them to a solar
powered circuit that turns an LED on when the poor plants are thirsty.
You will do some very basic electronics and play with solar power
while making something useful. All the electronic components, sensors
materials and instruction are included.
*Time and Date:*
7-9pm, Wednesday 26th June
*Venue:*
Rough Trade East
Dray Walk
91 Brick Lane
London
E1 6QL
*Sign-up:*
http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/event/6257362941?ref=ecal#
Thanks!
Em
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*Technology Will Save Us*
Emilie Giles
www.technologywillsaveus.org <http://www.technologywillsaveus.org/>
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
@techwillsaveus
+44 (0) 7811 305647
Trading as Hirsch and Mann Ltd
Registered in England No. 7361568 . VAT No. 101 9849 18
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