Handy Board
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Handy Board is a popular handheld robotics controller. The Handy Board was designed by Fred G. Martin at MIT (now at UMass Lowell), and the design is licensed free of charge. Thus, several manufacturers make Handy Boards. The Handy Board is used by hundreds of schools worldwide and by many hobbyists for their robot projects.
[edit] Handy Board specs
- 68HC11 8-bit microcontroller @ 2MHz
- 32KB battery-backed SRAM
- 2x16 LCD character display
- Support for four 1A motors
- Digital and analog I/O
[edit] External links
- Handyboard Hackers' Resource Guide - resources for interacting with the handyboard on a lower level, including a 16 servo controller modification, a bootstrapping, self-relocating talker which accepts verbatim s19 records, and recently a modular kernel and library.