×
Registration
Please Fill Recaptcha To Continue
First name is required!
Last name is required!
First name is not valid!
Last name is not valid!
This is not an email address!
Email address is required!
This email is already registered!
Password is required!
Enter a valid password!
Please enter 6 or more characters!
Please enter 16 or less characters!
Passwords are not same!
Terms and Conditions are required!
Email or Password is wrong!
Captcha is required!
Captcha is wrong!
-
Posted on April 16, 2014
By: jerry & filed under
Tutorial
Raspberry PI 2.8" TFT Add-on is customized for Raspberry Pi based on 2.8" TFT LCD display module. The screen is driven based on an 8-bit data bus and a 4-bit ILI9323DS to control bus interface, which can display 263K colors. … Continue reading →
-
Itead is planning to launch several Raspberry Pi shields soon including Screws Prototype Add-on, GSM Add-on, LCD1602 Add-on, GPS Add-on and lego Add-on, etc. Now let's have a quick look at these boards. Screws Prototype Add-on extends all pins of … Continue reading →
-
Posted on June 26, 2013
By: jerry & filed under
Tutorial
ITEAD PN532 NFC module is equipped with double-row pin, which can be connected directly to the Raspberry Pie via connection cable and then drive the module for non-contact near field communication operations, such as reading and writing 13.56M IC card … Continue reading →
-
Previously we released a Raspberry PI LCD Adapter Kit, which allows users to connect the LCD module of ITDB02-2.4E and ITDB02-2.8 directly to the Raspberry PI development board and provides a library example which is modified based on Henning's UTFT … Continue reading →
-
We released a "Raspberry PI LCD Adapter Kit" before, and you can have our ITDB02-2.4E and ITDB02-2.8 connected directly to the Raspberry Pi for use. Here we provide some demo codes for these two screens – the demo codes are … Continue reading →
-
With the best selling of Raspberry Pi, we are receiving more and more e-mails consulting how to drive our ITDB02 Series TFT LCD modules with Raspberry Pi. If you use the I/O library of Raspberry Pi, it is quite easy to … Continue reading →