[go: up one dir, main page]

Showing 2 open source projects for "interval timer"

View related business solutions
  • Gen AI apps are built with MongoDB Atlas Icon
    Gen AI apps are built with MongoDB Atlas

    The database for AI-powered applications.

    MongoDB Atlas is the developer-friendly database used to build, scale, and run gen AI and LLM-powered apps—without needing a separate vector database. Atlas offers built-in vector search, global availability across 115+ regions, and flexible document modeling. Start building AI apps faster, all in one place.
    Start Free
  • AI-powered SAST and AppSec platform that helps companies find and fix vulnerabilities. Icon
    AI-powered SAST and AppSec platform that helps companies find and fix vulnerabilities.

    Trusted by 750+ companies and performing 200k+ code scans monthly.

    ZeroPath (YC S24) is an AI-native application security platform that delivers comprehensive code protection beyond traditional SAST. Founded by security engineers from Tesla and Google, ZeroPath combines large language models with advanced program analysis to find and automatically fix vulnerabilities.
    Learn More
  • 1

    microDispatch

    Microcontroller Task Scheduler

    Super lightweight task scheduler aimed at 8 bit AVR ATmega micro-controllers (perfect for Arduino), although it can easily be used on other hardware like Microchip PIC. It uses simple round-robin scheduling so no priority levels can be set. You choose the time interval by calling dispatchTick(), this is usually in a timer interrupt. Range for number of tasks: 0 to 255 tasks Range for delay: 0 to 65535 ticks Each task only uses 5 byte of RAM. The one task LED blink example only uses 5 bytes of RAM and 476 bytes of program memory for the whole program.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    TIC! Camera Timer
    This is an open-hardware one-button time-lapse camera timer initially developed for a Canon 400D Digital SLR camera. It can be used to take photographs at intervals from 1 second to 65535 seconds (approximately 18 hours). Uses a PIC microcontroller.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next