Thank you for the explanation. Hopefully I learn something from the reference you linked. I’ll watch the video first before reading the literatures.
Software engineer, electronics hobbyist.
Thank you for the explanation. Hopefully I learn something from the reference you linked. I’ll watch the video first before reading the literatures.
Thank you for taking the time to explain the topic to me. I appreciate it. I’ll try to read the book.
What does “material analysis” means in this context? What should I search to know more? I searched the term and only came up with chemistry topics.
Do flights normally provide free drinking water? I am under the impression that passengers must buy bottled water in flight if they want to drink.
This is the way.
“comma’s”?
“COMMA’S”?!
Crinkled/rolled metal foil, probably.
I just gotta say that’s a really great comeback 😂
Well done 🥶
I do. It suffice.
Lol: Hello World! → Good morrow, fellow subjects of the Crown.
I agree with the Arduino approach for learning: try something that immediately gives feedback.
On a more concrete example you can start with Make: Electronics book by Charles Platt. PDF of the first edition (2009) is available from Makezine’s own CDN. The book encourages learning by discovery. The leading text makes it clear:
Burn things out, mess things up—that’s how you learn.
Nice! 🌲