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You're reading from  Wearable-Tech Projects with the Raspberry Pi Zero

Product typeBook
Published inJul 2017
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781786468819
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Jon Witts
Jon Witts
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Jon Witts

Jon Witts has been working within the IT industry since 2002 and specifically within Educational IT since 2004. He was introduced to Linux back in 2001 through his collaboration with two German artists who were visiting the arts organisation he was then working with. Having studied Fine Arts and Educational Technology and sought to innovate with open and accessible digital technologies within his creative practice, Jon is happiest when deconstructing technology and finding its limits. Jon has embedded within his school the use of Raspberry Pi computers, as an integral part of the delivery of the school's Computer Science curriculum as well as to run various school clubs and projects. Jon is a Raspberry Pi Certified Educator and also helps to organise and run the Hull Raspberry Jam events. I would like to thank my wife, Sally and our three daughters for putting up with all the cables and compoents around the house, and not least for being so tolerant of the need to dodge the robots racing round the kitchen floor!
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Summary

In this chapter, we saw how we can attach analog sensors to our Pi Zero with the use of an ADC, and how we can add 5V sensors to our 3.3V Pi Zero with the use of a simple resistor-based voltage divider. We have also gone a bit further with our use of the Scroll pHAT HD by creating two different areas on our display, which update at different intervals.

The program for monitoring our heart rate introduces some more advanced mathematics to keep a track of the high and low pulses of our sensor, tracking the time between them, and calculating the average of a set of ten of these beats to calculate our BPM.

You can see a video of my completed heart rate monitor at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CaQMu6f1UJ8

In our next and final chapter, we will create our own GPS tracker, which we can use to log where and how far we move, while we are out and about!

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Wearable-Tech Projects with the Raspberry Pi Zero
Published in: Jul 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781786468819

Author (1)

author image
Jon Witts

Jon Witts has been working within the IT industry since 2002 and specifically within Educational IT since 2004. He was introduced to Linux back in 2001 through his collaboration with two German artists who were visiting the arts organisation he was then working with. Having studied Fine Arts and Educational Technology and sought to innovate with open and accessible digital technologies within his creative practice, Jon is happiest when deconstructing technology and finding its limits. Jon has embedded within his school the use of Raspberry Pi computers, as an integral part of the delivery of the school's Computer Science curriculum as well as to run various school clubs and projects. Jon is a Raspberry Pi Certified Educator and also helps to organise and run the Hull Raspberry Jam events. I would like to thank my wife, Sally and our three daughters for putting up with all the cables and compoents around the house, and not least for being so tolerant of the need to dodge the robots racing round the kitchen floor!
Read more about Jon Witts