1Arduino is an open-source physical computing platform based on a simple i/o 2board and a development environment that implements the Processing/Wiring 3language. Arduino can be used to develop stand-alone interactive objects or 4can be connected to software on your computer (e.g. Flash, Processing, MaxMSP). 5The boards can be assembled by hand or purchased preassembled; the open-source 6IDE can be downloaded for free. 7 8For more information, see the website at: http://www.arduino.cc/ 9or the forums at: http://www.arduino.cc/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl 10 11To report a bug or a make a suggestions, go to: 12[hardware] http://www.arduino.cc/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?board=hwbugs 13[software] http://www.arduino.cc/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?board=swbugs 14 15INSTALLATION 16Detailed instructions are in reference/Guide_Windows.html and 17reference/Guide_MacOSX.html. For Linux, see the Arduino playground: 18http://www.arduino.cc/playground/Learning/Linux 19 20If you are using a USB Arduino, you will need to install the drivers for the 21FTDI chip on the board. These can be found in the drivers/ directory. 22 23* On Windows, plug in the Arduino board and point the Windows Add Hardware 24 wizard to the drivers/FTDI USB Drivers sub-directory of the Arduino 25 application directory. 26 27* On the Mac, install the FTDIUSBSerialDriver_10_4_10_5_10_6.mpkg package. 28 29* On Linux, drivers are included in kernel versions 2.4.20 or greater. 30 31CREDITS 32Arduino is an open source project, supported by many. 33 34The Arduino team is composed of Massimo Banzi, David Cuartielles, Tom Igoe, 35Gianluca Martino, and David A. Mellis. 36 37Arduino uses the GNU avr-gcc toolchain, avrdude, avr-libc, and code from 38Processing and Wiring. 39 40Icon designed by ToDo: http://www.todo.to.it/ 41"About" image created by Thomas Glaser (envis precisely). 42 43