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RF24 Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to RF24
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MicroPython
MicroPython - a lean and efficient Python implementation for microcontrollers and constrained systems
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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HCSR04
Arduino library for HC-SR04, HC-SRF05, DYP-ME007, BLJ-ME007Y, JSN-SR04T ultrasonic ranging sensor
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TLE5012-Magnetic-Angle-Sensor
This repository includes an library for Arduino for the TLE5012 Magnetic Angle Sensor with SSC interface.
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RF24
Discontinued OSI Layer 2 driver for nRF24L01 on Arduino & Raspberry Pi/Linux Devices [Moved to: https://github.com/nRF24/RF24] (by tmrh20)
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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TFLuna-I2C
Arduino library for the Benewake TFLuna LiDAR distance sensor in the I2C communication mode
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Arduino-SDI-12
An Arduino library for SDI-12 communication with a wide variety of environmental sensors. This library provides a general software solution, without requiring any additional hardware.
RF24 reviews and mentions
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higher channels not working on nRF24l01+PA+LNA radio units
Yeah. If you have the main RF24 library installed it's under the examples in "scanner"
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wifi/location automation programming?
No unfortunately I don't. One of the cool things I did learn about the NRF24L01's though is that on the main page run by the guy that is like THE author of the library that everybody uses with them; He has a sketch that you can run and it will scan all of the frequency channels it supports and give you an ascii graph showing which ones it saw signals the most on.
- How to redirect stdout within MegaTinyCore?
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Which one is correct?
Here is THE library on which 90% of everyone else's libraries are based off of. This guy quite literally wrote the book on these devices. Bookmark this link and treat this guy as the source of truth for all things related to the RF24 series. I recently discovered 8 NRF24L01's that I had stuck away and I've been playing with them for about the past two months and this is my go-to website for anything I want to know about connecting them and using them. 🙃
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Help me ASAP!!!!
That's right. Just like Wifi and other radio comms have the ability to vary which specific frequency they make use of, the RF24 line and others give you the ability to choose the default channel. I think each of the available channels is about 100Hz away from each other. Here is the main web page by the author of pretty much the go-to library for the RF24 series of devices. One of the projects he has listed there (if I remember correctly) will go through all of the available channels and give you a psuedo-graphic representation of how much interference it is seeing on each channel in order to hep pick which channel to use so you aren't fighting it out with all of the devices your neighbors might be using with the various devices they have.
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nrf24L01+ scanner porting from cpp to micropython
I started playing around with my pico and an nrf24L01+ module this week and I was thinking to just hack this a bit more, starting from porting the https://github.com/nRF24/RF24/blob/master/examples_pico/scanner.cpp scanner to micropython.
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Help with nRF24l01+ library
I used the RF24 library and official datasheet as a reference.
- nRF24L01+PA+LNA Problems with getting Started scrip
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My first project! I know it's just a wireless servo and my code is totally crooked, but you gotta start somewhere right! i should've gotten this stuff so much sooner...
Which Library did you use to interface with the NRF modules? I've tried the RadioHead library and this one but haven't been able to get a successful send/receive between my two Arduinos.
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I found an easy way to test 2.4GHz downconverters for RTL SDR using a nRF24L01 module
But I didn't know if it worked. I saw a lot of different random signals, but I had no way to know if it was just amplified noise, nor I had a way to know if the downconverter frequency was exactly 2.4GHz, or something else. I have a few cheap nRF24L01 modules around, and plenty of 3.3V Arduino boards, so after a quick read on the nRF24 library (https://github.com/nRF24/RF24), I had a super simple generator running using the carrier wave function of the nRF24.
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A note from our sponsor - WorkOS
workos.com | 19 Apr 2024
Stats
nRF24/RF24 is an open source project licensed under GNU General Public License v3.0 only which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of RF24 is C++.