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    Arduino Firmata Actor

    Interfacing
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    • liminal_andy
      liminal_andy @mark last edited by liminal_andy

      @mark Totally understand your point. We would be limiting the hardware dramatically by making these choices for the user. My thinking is that such a choice would allow me to hand a board to someone and say, "Here's the board, here's the actor, let's play." An early user may not need all of this functionality, they just need some PWM pins and some sense capabilities. When they are ready to grow out of the presets we created, they at least have the foundation. It's training wheels, but I feel strongly about getting more artists ready to use low level hardware because of the implications of physically reactive design.

      Andy Carluccio
      Zoom Video Communications, Inc.
      www.liminalet.com

      [R9 3900X, RTX 2080, 64GB DDR4 3600, Win 10, Izzy 3.0.8]
      [...also a bunch of hackintoshes...]

      mark 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • mark
        mark @liminal_andy last edited by

        @liminal_andy said:

        We would be limiting the hardware dramatically by making these choices for the user. My thinking is that such a choice would allow me to hand a board to someone and say, "Here's the board, here's the actor, let's play." An early user may not need all of this functionality, they just need some PWM pins and some sense capabilities. 

        Alright, I'm hearing you. Duly noted.

        Best Wishes,
        Mark

        Media Artist & Creator of Isadora
        Macintosh SE-30, 32 Mb RAM, MacOS 7.6, Dual Floppy Drives

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • bonemap
          bonemap Izzy Guru @mark last edited by bonemap

          @mark

          Hi,

          But the Firmata implementation does not replace the Serial interface group of actors -Serial In Watcher, Send Serial etc. does it? So in the overall scope of Isadora’s capability to interface with Arduino a simplified approach with Firmata will have no loss of extended functionality. As has been commented by a number of responses in this thread - the implementation is aimed at non-programmers and students/beginners. Some loss of extended functionality/limitation as a compromise towards simplicity and ease of use or as a quick prototyping, or introductory step to using a microcontroller with Isadora, is worth considering. Even as a non-programmer I know that I can turn to/take the next step towards serial functionality if I ever reach that level of sophistication with interfacing microcontrollers with Isadora.

          So I think there is some merit in reflecting on a direct and albeit limited approach for the sake of plug and play simplicity.

          Best wishes

          Russell

          http://bonemap.com | Australia
          Izzy STD 4.2 | USB 3.6 | + Beta
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          mark 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • mark
            mark @bonemap last edited by mark

            @bonemap said:

            But the Firmata implementation does not replace the Serial interface group of actors -Serial In Watcher, Send Serial etc. does it?

            No it does not replace them, it is an addition to the existing serial actors. This new actor will handle all the serial input and output internally.

            We are always (painfully) mindful of backwards compatibility. We'd never take away an actor as fundamental as that.

            Best Wishes,
            Mark

            Media Artist & Creator of Isadora
            Macintosh SE-30, 32 Mb RAM, MacOS 7.6, Dual Floppy Drives

            bonemap 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • bonemap
              bonemap Izzy Guru @mark last edited by

              @mark said:

              We'd never take away an actor as fundamental as that.

              And I would say there is good, workable documentation and instruction for using Arduino with the Serial In Watcher, Send Serial Data actors. It is available through Isadora knowledge base. At least enough for a non-programmer like myself to succeed.

              Best wishes

              Russell

              http://bonemap.com | Australia
              Izzy STD 4.2 | USB 3.6 | + Beta
              MBP 16” 2019 2.4 GHz Intel i9 64GB AMD Radeon Pro 5500 8 GB 4TB SSD | 14.5 Sonoma
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              fubbi mark 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • fubbi
                fubbi @bonemap last edited by

                What are the advantages of serial communication for the opportunistic prototyper?

                I believe the future of accessible micro-controlling is ESP32 (web server, bluetooth low energy, processing power) and Teensy (Out of the box HID or Midi interface). 

                Mac M2 Ultra, 64gb — Berlin

                mark T 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • mark
                  mark @fubbi last edited by mark

                  @fubbi said:

                  What are the advantages of serial communication for the opportunistic prototyper?

                  That's a separate discussion, which you can most certainly start a thread about. Let's stick to the question at hand, OK? (Most Arduinos come with a USB serial interface connector that appears as a serial connection, as you know.)

                  Best Wishes,
                  Mar

                  Media Artist & Creator of Isadora
                  Macintosh SE-30, 32 Mb RAM, MacOS 7.6, Dual Floppy Drives

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                  • mark
                    mark @bonemap last edited by

                    @bonemap said:

                    And I would say there is good, workable documentation and instruction for using Arduino with the Serial In Watcher, Send Serial Data actors. It is available through Isadora knowledge base. At least enough for a non-programmer like myself to succeed.

                    I'm mostly going on the multiple requests I've gotten on this over the years. On the Facebook post I made about this, several educators were immediately enthusiastic, so I would see merit in finishing this up. (It was basically two days of time while I waited for the team to test other stuff.)

                    Best Wishes,
                    Mark

                    Media Artist & Creator of Isadora
                    Macintosh SE-30, 32 Mb RAM, MacOS 7.6, Dual Floppy Drives

                    bonemap 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • bonemap
                      bonemap Izzy Guru @mark last edited by

                      @mark

                      Super happy to get hands on with the Arduino Firmata implementation - if it is ready let’s try it.

                      Best wishes

                      Russell

                      http://bonemap.com | Australia
                      Izzy STD 4.2 | USB 3.6 | + Beta
                      MBP 16” 2019 2.4 GHz Intel i9 64GB AMD Radeon Pro 5500 8 GB 4TB SSD | 14.5 Sonoma
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                      • T
                        tonyschuite @fubbi last edited by

                        @fubbi

                        by knowing about ESP32 you already know about the Arduino more than the focus group for this actor and I would recommend just using the serial actors.

                        @marc

                        Reading the comments here, I think there is some good insights. as to the practical question of how you would implement an auto populated actor: after populating you would set the ins and outs to "none". If you then set one of the pins to be output, you disable the input field and vice versa, so it cannot be modified anymore.

                        Also, in  regards to it being too many options: there are a fair few actors that have this. I don't think it is that much of a worry. however, you could go the route of only show the first 4 pins and add in the "help" section that you can enable more capabilities.

                        mark 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • mark
                          mark @tonyschuite last edited by

                          @tonyschuite @bonemap @liminal_andy @juriaan

                          So, I've listened to all you have to say, and made substantial changes to the actor. I've explained how it's working now in this video, as it was easier to do this than to write it all out.

                          Please let me know if you think will help make this accessible to beginners and students who might use this actor.

                          Best Wishes,
                          Mark

                          Media Artist & Creator of Isadora
                          Macintosh SE-30, 32 Mb RAM, MacOS 7.6, Dual Floppy Drives

                          Juriaan bonemap Armando liminal_andy 5 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • Juriaan
                            Juriaan Tech Staff @mark last edited by Juriaan

                            @mark

                            Chapeau. That looks amazing and simple enough for students/people that never touched Arduino before. Just tell the system what you want, and be done with it :)

                            I could not wish for anything more, I love that it also labels the names of the Input / Output of the actor with the Pin / Type of pin that you generated. PWM, Analog, Digital, Encoder and Servo.

                            Isadora 3.1.1, Dell XPS 17 9710, Windows 10
                            Interactive Performance Designer, Freelance Artist, Scenographer, Lighting Designer, TroikaTronix Community moderator
                            Always in for chatting about interaction in space / performance design. Drop me an email at hello@juriaan.me

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                            • bonemap
                              bonemap Izzy Guru @mark last edited by bonemap

                              @mark said:

                              I've explained how it's working now in this video

                               That appears very straight forward! nice solution with the innovation of the button to generate/automate connection ports, which I don't recall being apart of any other Isadora actor.  Is it just Arduino's or are other boards suitable?

                              So the process would be grab the Firmata Standard Arduino Code and load it onto whatever flavour of board is at hand - using the Arduino IDE or similar. Connect the board through USB to the Serial Setup in Isadora as usual. Run the Firmata actor and check for a connection by observing the 'firmware' output. Determine what input and output ports are required for the project, enter these parameters and click the generate button - start linking data throughput with the rest of the patch.

                              Great !

                              What happens if I decide I need more ports after I have generated the initial ones can I go back and add through the same process or do I need to add through the edit text parser?

                              Best Wishes

                              Russell

                              http://bonemap.com | Australia
                              Izzy STD 4.2 | USB 3.6 | + Beta
                              MBP 16” 2019 2.4 GHz Intel i9 64GB AMD Radeon Pro 5500 8 GB 4TB SSD | 14.5 Sonoma
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                              mark 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • mark
                                mark @bonemap last edited by mark

                                @bonemap said:

                                Are other boards suitable?

                                This actor relies the Firmata protocol, which allows things like asking the board what it's capabilities are (e.g. how many pins do you have? what can they do?) So if the board (whatever it is) runs Firmata, it would work.

                                So the process would be grab the Firmata Standard Arduino Code and load it onto whatever flavour of board is at hand - using the Arduino IDE or similar. Connect the board through USB to the Serial Setup in Isadora as usual. Run the Firmata actor and check for a connection by observing the 'firmware' output. Determine what input and output ports are required for the project, enter these parameters and click the generate button - start linking data throughput with the rest of the patch.

                                 Yes, that's it.

                                What happens if I decide I need more ports after I have generated the initial ones can I go back and add through the same process or do I need to add through the edit text parser?

                                Well, right now it would overwrite whatever's there. If you've not modified it by hand, no biggie. But otherwise you'd lose your changes.

                                But if @tonyschuite agrees that this would make it easy for the students he teachers, I'll get this ready for distribution so people can try it.

                                Best Wishes,
                                Mark

                                Media Artist & Creator of Isadora
                                Macintosh SE-30, 32 Mb RAM, MacOS 7.6, Dual Floppy Drives

                                jfg 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • jfg
                                  jfg @mark last edited by

                                  @mark

                                  Great and very useful. A lot of students will love it.

                                  best

                                  Jean-François 

                                  • Izzy 3.2.6
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                                  - Mac mini Pro M4, Mac OS 15.3.2 Sequoia

                                  • A range of deployable older Macs
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                                  • DusX
                                    DusX Tech Staff last edited by

                                    @mark this is awesome!!! Really fantastic!!

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                                    • bonemap
                                      bonemap Izzy Guru @mark last edited by bonemap

                                      @mark

                                      Hi,

                                      The Actor is amazing as is but Some additional reflecting on the procedure outlined in your video. There is an element of guess work in letting the actor report back on the availability of ports. I think I would want to know what a board is capable of before making the setting port parameters and generating them. If the board rejected a parameter setting I would want to know why. 

                                      A little online research into the specification of a particular board would probably be all that is required. Another approach might be to consider having an option to reveal the full capacity of the board through the actor- so there is some clear guideline to what the board is capable of before setting port assignments. Could the process be, using the existing actor as proposed, to trigger settings with an aim to reveal all of the the boards potential ports and then pair back/assign the ports on a second pass?

                                      Or perhaps a dialog is populated with the boards port type and capacity when I select the port number... then I would be equiped with the information required to make appropriate port assignments for the board..

                                      The demonstrated actor is great as is - so these are just additional thoughts.

                                      Best wishes

                                      Russell

                                      http://bonemap.com | Australia
                                      Izzy STD 4.2 | USB 3.6 | + Beta
                                      MBP 16” 2019 2.4 GHz Intel i9 64GB AMD Radeon Pro 5500 8 GB 4TB SSD | 14.5 Sonoma
                                      Mac Studio 2023 M2 Ultra 128GB | OSX 15.3 Sequoia
                                      A range of deployable older Macs

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                                      • Armando
                                        Armando Beta Gold @mark last edited by

                                        @mark Amazing work Mark !

                                        The only thing I don't understand in the video is why outputs are on the right in the actor and inputs on the left....

                                        Ciao ! 

                                        Armando Menicacci
                                        www.studiosit.ca
                                        MacBook Pro 16-inch, 2021 Apple M1 Max, RAM 64 GB, 4TB SSD, Mac OS Sonoma 14.4.1 (23E224)

                                        bonemap mark 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • bonemap
                                          bonemap Izzy Guru @Armando last edited by bonemap

                                          @armando said:

                                          why outputs are on the left in the actor and inputs on the right

                                          Hi,

                                          I know! I did a second take of that as well! But if you think of the actor module as a simulacrum/stand-in for the board itself it makes more sense. If I have a sensor attached to the Arduino it is an input therefore it is labeled as an input in the Isadora module. If I wanted to send current information to a servo motor or a relay it is an output on the board and therefore labelled an output in the module.

                                          Best Wishes

                                          Russell

                                          http://bonemap.com | Australia
                                          Izzy STD 4.2 | USB 3.6 | + Beta
                                          MBP 16” 2019 2.4 GHz Intel i9 64GB AMD Radeon Pro 5500 8 GB 4TB SSD | 14.5 Sonoma
                                          Mac Studio 2023 M2 Ultra 128GB | OSX 15.3 Sequoia
                                          A range of deployable older Macs

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                                          • mark
                                            mark @Armando last edited by mark

                                            @armando said:

                                            The only thing I don't understand in the video is why outputs are on the right in the actor and inputs on the left....

                                            I debated this because I knew someone would feel like it's backward. But just think about it for the second

                                            The definition is talking about PINS, which are physical input or output pins on the Arduino board.

                                            For a physical input pin on the Arduino board, data will enter the input pin and the board will pass the incoming data on to Isadora. Thus, you need an output on the actor.

                                            For a physical output pin on the Arduino board, Isadora must to send data to the Arduino so it can pass that data to the output pin. Thus you and you need an input on the actor.

                                            Refer again to the Firmata Test App screen shot:


                                            This is defining the PINS on the Arduino board, as either inputs or outputs. The specification does the same.

                                            But the fact that someone as experienced as you found this confusing does not encourage me that I've made the right choice. Hmmmmmm.

                                            Best Wishes,
                                            Mark

                                            Media Artist & Creator of Isadora
                                            Macintosh SE-30, 32 Mb RAM, MacOS 7.6, Dual Floppy Drives

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