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Internet of Things with Arduino Blueprints

You're reading from   Internet of Things with Arduino Blueprints Develop interactive Arduino-based Internet projects with Ethernet and WiFi

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785285486
Length 210 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Pradeeka Seneviratne Pradeeka Seneviratne
Author Profile Icon Pradeeka Seneviratne
Pradeeka Seneviratne
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Internet-Controlled PowerSwitch FREE CHAPTER 2. Wi-Fi Signal Strength Reader and Haptic Feedback 3. Internet-Connected Smart Water Meter 4. Arduino Security Camera with Motion Detection 5. Solar Panel Voltage Logging with NearBus Cloud Connector and Xively 6. GPS Location Tracker with Temboo, Twilio, and Google Maps 7. Tweet-a-Light – Twitter-Enabled Electric Light 8. Controlling Infrared Devices Using IR Remote Index

Adding an IR socket to non-IR enabled devices


Think, what if you want to control a device that hasn't any built-in infrared receiving functionality. Fortunately, you can do this by using an infrared socket. An infrared socket is a pluggable device that can be plugged into a electrical wall socket. Then, you can plug your electrical device into it. In addition, the IR Socket has a simple IR receiving unit, and you can attach it to a place where the IR signal can be received properly.

The following image shows the frontal view of the IR socket:

The infrared socket—front view

The following image shows the side view of the IR socket:

The IR socket side view

A generic type of IR socket comes with a basic remote control with a single key for power on and off:

The IR remote control for The IR socket

  1. Before you proceed with this project, trace the IR raw code for the power button of your remote control.

  2. Copy the Arduino sketch, B04844_08_05.ino, from the sample code folder of Chapter 8, and paste it to...

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