Maker Friendly Sensor Board Uses Cutting-Edge Smartphone Technology

A new crowdfunding campaign for a project called "tinyLiDAR" is about to launch on Friday, July 14th at 8:00amET.

Toronto, Canada, July 14, 2017 --(PR.com)-- It's about a low-cost distance sensor module that makes use of a new laser sensor chip from ST Microelectronics called the VL53L0X. The chip has already shipped in over a quarter billion smartphones to date. The sensor chip is fairly complex to use but this project aims to fix all that by adding some smarts inside of a dedicated 32-bit microcontroller. As a bonus, they have souped-up the sensor to run at 50% higher than normal speeds.

See more at https://igg.me/at/tinylidar

"We were working on relatively simple project that needed an accurate, low cost proximity sensor some time ago," explains Dinesh Bhatia, Principal Design Engineer at MicroElectronicDesign. "The ultrasonic sensors available online in abundance are horribly inaccurate when you actually go to use them. But the specs look great on the websites. I don't know how they can get away with that! So we looked into companies that the big guys used. That's where we found the new VL53L0X laser sensor chip from ST. Talk about a lot technology in this little package! It contains a cavity laser in silicon and over 200 avalanche diodes that are so sensitive they can even respond to a single photon. And it can measure down to picoseconds. From their presentations we knew it had shipped in over 250 million phones so we knew it wasn't based on fluff. But using it was the next challenge. There was so much technology in it that even the documentation was daunting so we decided to change that by making a tiny board with a dedicated 32-bit microcontroller to deal with this laser sensor chip and talk in simple terms to Arduino. This makes tinyLiDAR one of the most user friendly and highest performing laser sensors around. And its perfect for Makers at any skill level." The campaign is short and has fixed funding so be sure to contribute early if you want to see this project come to life.
Contact
MicroElectronicDesign, Inc.
Dinesh Bhatia
info@microelectronicdesign.com
https://www.tinylidar.com
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