Projects from the Hardware Hackathon: A Smartphone Interface
A project from the Hardware Hackathon.
A project from the Hardware Hackathon.
One of the student projects from the Hardware Hackathon.
Find out more about building your own affordable lab test bench.
Learn more about Hamster used the Nexys Video for working with DisplayPort.
Reverse engineering a broken SD card with the help of an FPGA buddy.
Want to have some LabVIEW fun? A few months ago, Davis Cook (dacook13) did a series of Instructables on using LabVIEW with Digilent products, and we thought it was a …
What are interrupts and how do they work?
A project designed to fill your time and your life with light.
We have a new hero in town: Spider-Dog.
Halloween is one of my favorite holidays. Nothing beats the crisp autumn air, the crunchy leaves blanketing sidewalks, picking out the largest deformed pumpkin at the pumpkin patch, or getting …
Excited about Linux projects on the ZedBoard? So are we!
Why — and how — you’d boot Linux on a ZedBoard without U-Boot.
The Question A Digilent forum user working on a vintage computing project needed to troubleshoot hardware built around a 6502 CPU. Their goal was to extract the CPU’s address and …
Hello readers, Oscar Fonseca here, product manager at Emerson, working closely with our NI and Digilent academic customers. In this blog, I’m going to compare the NI ELVIS III and the Digilent Analog Discovery Studio Max (ADS Max). As someone who …
NI USB oscilloscopes have a strong track record. If your workflow specifically depends on NI‑SCOPE driver features, InstrumentStudio, or formal calibration services, then NI’s modular instruments are the right path. For most prototyping, research, and validation teams, the Analog …
If you have ever pushed the bandwidth higher on an instrument and thought, “Why does this look worse now?” you are not alone. Many engineers run into this when they try to …