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$35 Sensor Watch crams a modern microcontroller into a classic Casio wristwatch

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Most modern smartwatches have color displays, wireless capabilities, the ability to alert you to notifications, and support for running first-party and third-party apps.

Sensor Watch doesn’t do any of that. But it is designed to take a classic Casio F-91W wristwatch and give it a modern upgrade thanks to a tiny circuit board with an ARM Cortex-M0+ microcontroller allowing you to run simple apps. The Sensor Watch is up for pre-order for $35 through a Crowd Supply crowdfunding campaign, and could begin shipping in September.

Note that the $35 price doesn’t include the cost of the Casio watch or shipping, but you should be able to pick one up for around $20 or less from Amazon or eBay if you don’t already have one. And shipping for the Sensor Watch runs $8 for crowdfunding backers in the US or $18 for global backers.

The Sensor Watch itself is a printed circuit board and sensor board. Everything else is repurposed from the Casio watch, so the finished product has the same monochrome 72-segment LCD display and the same water resistant enclosure – it should be waterproof for depths up to 30 meters. And since it lacks wireless capabilities, a 100 mAh coin cell battery should provide up to a year of battery life.

Of course, those limitations mean that you won’t be able to use the Sensor Watch for things like notifications. So what can it do? The clue is in the name.

Thanks to an integrated sensor board, it can be programmed to run applications that show data from the sensor. By default, it will ship with a thermistor sensor board that can be used to show the temperature. But the Sensor Watch is designed to be modular and hackable, so folks who want to design their own sensor boards can swap them out to add other functions. There are already open source designs for motion, light, and other sensor boards.

Initial apps/watch faces will include a Clock, World Clock, Temperature and Temperature Log (with up to 36 hours of timestamped data), and a one-time password app that can be used for multi-factor authentication purposes. But users will be able to develop their own apps as well.

At the heart of the Sensor Watch is a custom printed circuit board with a SAM L22 ARM Cortex-M0+ 32 MHz microcontroller featuring 256KB of flash storage and 32KB of RAM. The board has built-in USB support, which allows you to plug it into a computer like a USB flash drive for programming purposes.

And if you need to know more about how the board is laid out, labels are printed directly on the PCB. If that idea sounds familiar, it may be because the Sensor Watch is the latest device from Oddly Specific Objects, which is run by developer Joey Castillo. Previously Castillo had released the Open Book Project, which includes several open source eReaders that also have incredibly well-labeled printed circuit boards.

The post $35 Sensor Watch crams a modern microcontroller into a classic Casio wristwatch appeared first on Liliputing.

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laydros
1043 days ago
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ÜT: 35.863634,-78.617643
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This 'numerical sledding game' is like Skifree, but with math

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slopes

If you like math, puzzles or winter sports, you need to play Sinerider, a sledding game where you transform the slope with math equations.

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laydros
3507 days ago
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ÜT: 35.863634,-78.617643
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Star Trek reboot fails the Bechdel test and is generally a genderfail

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The Trekkie Has the Phone Box has analyzed the way women are presented in the second of the Star Trek reboot movies; and compared it to Gene Rodenberry's original show, which went to great lengths to establish gender parity and racial diversity in its depicted future. The analysis goes into some convincing detail and makes me think that the reboot is a very retrograde move in the history of the Trek franchise and how it deals with women.

Star Trek 2 Bechdel Test

    


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laydros
4140 days ago
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I generally like the movies, but this is lame.
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Compare the Front Pages of Yesterday’s Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times

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Remember a few weeks ago when The Chicago Sun-Times fired its entire photography staff and claimed they could replace them with reporters armed with iPhones? Here’s the result.

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laydros
4164 days ago
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6 public comments
dzar34
4163 days ago
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Yuck, Sun-times. Good decision, though...
Milwaukee
rikishiama
4164 days ago
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well, the difference is stark enough, but it has to be said that the Tribune's photo is not a great photo either.
jhamill
4164 days ago
Definitely. They choose a bad photo and didn't edit it to fit their layout. That's the issue, not the type of camera that took the photo.
4160 days ago
The Tribune's photo is cropped in the picture. The top half is cut off.
emdot
4164 days ago
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Read it and weep, Sun-Times.
San Luis Obispo, CA
satadru
4164 days ago
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Shocked, shocked...
New York, NY
jamesdurand
4164 days ago
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Well that's just embarrassing.
BN
4164 days ago
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Doing less with less...