Philip P. Ide

Author, programmer, science enthusiast, half-wit.
Life is sweet. Have you tasted it lately?

User Tools

Site Tools


blog:articles:raspberry:mechanical_clock:discuss

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
blog:articles:raspberry:mechanical_clock:discuss [2024/07/23 15:07] Phil Ideblog:articles:raspberry:mechanical_clock:discuss [Unknown date] (current) – removed - external edit (Unknown date) 127.0.0.1
Line 1: Line 1:
-====== Mechanical Clock ====== 
- 
- 
-I was looking around at some of the projects people have done with their Raspberry Pi computers, and I must admit I'm pretty impressed with a lot of them. Then I came across one I've seen before: a binary clock. A binary clock usually has a set of LEDs that indicate a number in binary, so for example, 25 seconds would be displayed as 11001. 
- 
-This is all well and good, and a bit (a lot) nerdy, but there are very few people in this world that can read hours, minutes and seconds off such a clock without working out what each of those digits represents. Another base would be better than base 2. 
  
blog/articles/raspberry/mechanical_clock/discuss.1721747276.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/07/23 15:07 by Phil Ide

Except where otherwise noted, content on this wiki is licensed under the following license: Copyright © Phil Ide
Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki