
Supposedly you need just four wires to get your microcontroller-based project talking to a home network over wifi. Our interests are less adventurous – the modules are sold as UART-to-wifi plugin devices, and that’s exactly how we’re going to use them.


So hackers and makers all over the world have been busy trying to access the onboad microcontroller and utilise the extra GPIO pins, to create a single-chip, all-in-one wifi controller. The reason they’ve created such a stir is that a) they’re cheap and b) the firmware can be (relatively) easily upgraded. In case you’ve been living in a cave with a tin can tied to the end of piece of string as an internet connection, you’ll probably know that these are the ultra-cheap wifi modules currently flooding out of Chinese factories and onto “hacker benches” all over the world. Last night was another BuildBrighton nerd-meet-up and, luckily, we had a couple of these new fangled ESP8266 wifi modules to try out. Pic10f series microcontroller based Project List of PDF.Pic16f72 microcontroller based Project List of PDF.PIC32 microcontroller based Projects List of PDF.Pic18f452 microcontroller based projects list PDF.Pic18f4550 microcontroller based projects List PDF.Pic16f877 based projects – PIC Microcontroller PDF Downloadable.

