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Nox Sluijtman 2022-10-14 14:02:39 +02:00
parent 19571ee383
commit 182c1db205

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@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ The solution was an [Olimex PWR-switch](https://www.olimex.com/Products/Duino/Sh
Setting it up was relatively easy. Setting it up was relatively easy.
First I connected my lamp to a European extension cord socket to a random power cable I still had laying around. First I connected a European extension socket to a random 230 volt cable I still had laying around.
Then I hooked that up to my PWR-switch and plugged my lamp into that contraption. Then I hooked that up to my PWR-switch and plugged my lamp into that contraption.
From there I got little bag of jumper wires from my local electronics store and hooked up the PWR-switch to my Raspberry Pi. From there I got little bag of jumper wires from my local electronics store and hooked up the PWR-switch to my Raspberry Pi.
@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ I hooked up the PWR-switch's positive to `GPIO 15` and it's ground to the preced
_Note_, `GPIO 15` is in reference to pin number 10 and the preceding ground pin is pin number 6. _Note_, `GPIO 15` is in reference to pin number 10 and the preceding ground pin is pin number 6.
From there I looked up how to send power to `GPIO 15` in order to have it switch to on. From there I looked up how to send power to `GPIO 15` in order to have it toggle to the "on" state.
The first step to this end is to initialise the pin. The first step to this end is to initialise the pin.
This can be done with: This can be done with:
```sh ```sh