This project emulates a scoreboard by using a Raspberry Pi connected to a 64x32 LED Matrix. Using the touchscreen of a PiTFT, the user can select a team to display from collegiate and professional hockey, football, and basketball. The user can also select rotation between teams instead of displaying only one team. The system then queries the ESPN API to get live scores from the Internet according to the user's settings. Finally, the team names, logos, and scores are displayed on the LED matrix. The scoreboard displays a celebration whenever a team scores in football or hockey.
When the selected team is not currently in a live game, the scoreboard displays the results of the previous game or the date, time, and opponent in the next game, depending on which is closer in time. Using cron, a command-line utility for scheduling jobs, the service starts on automatically on boot and defaults to displaying any supported sport and team.
HARDWARE DESIGN
The hardware consists of three major components: a Raspberry Pi 4, a touchscreen PITFT, and a 64x32 LED Matrix. The Raspberry Pi contains a 16GB SD Card with the default Raspberry Pi Linux installed. As shown in Figure 1, The LED Matrix gets 5V of power from the included DC adapter, the PiTFT gets power from the Raspberry Pi, and the Raspberry Pi gets 3.3V from the included USB-C cable. The LED Matrix gets wired to the Raspberry Pi's GPIOs, according to Table 1 and Figure 2, while the PiTFT header is designed to simply snap onto the top of the Raspberry Pi [1]. LED Matrix pins are numbered left to right, and top to bottom.
SOFTWARE DESIGN
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Renesas New RA8 Entry-Line MCU Groups Brings High Performance of Arm Cortex-M85 Processor to Cost-Sensitive Applications with Market-Leading CoreMark Performance
Renesas Electronics Corp., a premier supplier of advanced semiconductor solutions, introduced the RA8E1 and RA8E2 microcontroller (MCU) groups, extending the industry's most powerful series of MCUs.
Same Sky Expands AMT Absolute Encoder Line to Support Larger Shaft Sizes
Same Sky's Motion & Control Group announced the addition of a new series to its innovative AMT absolute encoder family designed to support larger motor shaft sizes from 9mm to 15.875mm (5/8 inch).
XP Power Launches New Series of Low-Profile, Baseplate-Cooled DC-DC Brick Converters
The RDF150 and RDF200 series are the latest additions to the RDF series of low-profile, baseplate-cooled, ultra-wide input DC-DC brick converters, which is already available in power outputs of 25W and 50W.
HMI Introduces Ultra-Low Voltage 12-bit GPIO Expander with Interrupt Output
HMI, a leading provider of advanced analog and power management technologies, announced the launch of its HL5310, an innovative ultra-low voltage 12-bit GPIO expander featuring interrupt output.
The Future of Embedded Chip Design Navigating the Chip Creation Space
Custom Silicon at Lower Cost, Reduced Development Time
The Long and Winding Road
From Maxim's RS-232 to WeMos ESP32: So Much to Do, So Little Time
Start to Finish Driving LCDs
Lumex Display with Microchip Driver for a TI MCU
Easing the Path for App Releases
Managed Development of React Native with Expo
Datasheet: Tiny Embedded Boards
Deliver Power, Performance, and Versatility in Meager Square Millimeters
Harvesting Ambient Energy
Hybrid Power Sources Cut IoT Battery Dependency