Overview
1. Choose the amount, be generous!
Everybody has a friend that's going crazy for Home Automation solutions. What? Uh, also your friends are crazy for it? So this is the time to gift them with an Oplà IoT kit, or just take a look to our Get a head start guide and make the Arduino Uno yours for €24. And if you feel particularly creative, you might be jumping into our guide dedicated to the people that want to unleash their creativity through many products.
Select the amount in the menu: 50€ - 100€ - 150€ - 200€!
2. Open your email and say WOHAAA!
Once the order is placed, you are going to receive the confirmation email at your account email address. Click on “View Gift Card” button and Share the Code!
3. Share the code with your friends and feel the coolest one in the neighborhood
Print the gift card and send it to the Arduino fan!
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Get Inspired
As Jallson Suryo discusses in his project, adding voice controls to our appliances typically involves an internet connection and a smart assistant device such as Amazon Alexa or Google Assistant. This means extra latency, security concerns, and increased expenses due to the additional hardware and bandwidth requirements. This is why he created a prototype based on an Arduino Nicla Voice that can provide power for up to four outlets using just a voice command. Suryo gathered a dataset by repeating the words “one," “two," “three," “four," “on," and “off” into his phone and then uploaded the recordings to an Edge Impulse project. From here, he split the files into individual words before rebalancing his dataset to ensure each label was equally represented. The classifier model was trained for keyword spotting and used Syntiant NDP120-optimal settings for voice to yield an accuracy of around 80%. Apart from the Nicla Voice, Suryo incorporated a Pro Micro board to handle switching the bank of relays on or off. When the Nicla Voice detects the relay number, such as “one” or “three," it then waits until the follow-up “on” or “off” keyword is detected. With both the number and state now known, it sends an I2C transmission to the accompanying Pro Micro which decodes the command and switches the correct relay. To see more about this voice-controlled power strip, be sure to check out Suryo’s Edge Impulse tutorial.