💾 Archived View for capsule.adrianhesketh.com › 2020 › 03 › 15 › real-terminal-bell captured on 2023-11-14 at 07:52:22. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2021-11-30)
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I decided that I didn't like the sound of the terminal bell on my computer. Wouldn't it be nicer if it was an actual bell?
So, I got a Raspberry Pi, a servo motor and some lego and built a real terminal one.
I didn't want to spend long on it, so I used some example Python code from [0] and added a Web server so that I could trigger the bell remotely.
from flask import Flask import RPi.GPIO as GPIO import time # Create Flask app. app = Flask(__name__) # Start GPIO up. servoPIN = 17 GPIO.setmode(GPIO.BCM) GPIO.setup(servoPIN, GPIO.OUT) p = GPIO.PWM(servoPIN, 50) # GPIO 17 for PWM with 50Hz p.start(2.5) # Initialization @app.route("/ding") def hello(): p.ChangeDutyCycle(7.5) time.sleep(0.3) p.ChangeDutyCycle(6.5) time.sleep(0.6) return "dong" if __name__ == '__main__': try: app.run(host = '0.0.0.0',port=5005) except KeyboardInterrupt: p.stop() GPIO.cleanup()
With that in place, I could get the bell to ring using curl.
curl 192.168.0.52:5005/ding
My son and I then set to work building a lego case.
I use [1] to manage my terminal, so it was a simple case of using the built-in hook feature [2] to run the command when the bell rings, and to disable the bell sound on my mac:
set-hook -g alert-bell 'run-shell "curl 192.168.0.52:5005/ding"'
<img src="/2020/03/people.jpg"/>
Ah... much nicer.
You can see a video and hear it in action at [3]
Single table pattern DynamoDB with Go - Part 1