LILYGO has announced a raft of new microcontroller development boards targeting different niches: a low-frequency LoRa board, an ultra-widescreen display board, a LoRa-equipped ePaper display board, and a CAN bus board. The boards are powered by the Espressif ESP32-S3 microcontroller.
Documentation for the ESP32-2432S028R, nicknamed the "Cheap Yellow Display" (CYD), a 2.8" LCD with touchscreen. Includes setup, examples, troubleshooting, and community links.
Git contributions e-ink display on an esp32. Show off your commit streaks with this wireless e-ink display. It uses an ESP32 to fetch and display your latest contributions.
This article details a project to create a small desktop appliance with an E-Ink display that shows a user's GitHub activity graph. It uses an ESP32 and a 3D-printed case, configured via a web interface.
Building a community around a cheap ESP32 Display with a touch screen. This display is an ESP32 with a built in 320 x 240 2.8" LCD display with a touch screen called the "ESP32-2432S028R".
The repository for LilyGO T-Wristband and T-Glass provides information on hardware specifications, examples, quick start guides, and installation instructions for both PlatformIO and Arduino IDE. It includes details on different versions of T-Glass, hardware specifications, and dependencies on lvgl v8.4.x.
Lopaka is a web-based tool for creating graphics and user interfaces for electronic projects, supporting various display types and libraries. It allows users to create images and interfaces visually, with generated source code for integration into projects.
The vPlayer, from Kevin Darrah, combines a 1.69 inch touch screen with the ESP32-S3 to create a programmable network-connected display that can show various information including system stats, live images, and videos from the Internet.
An experiment using e-paper displays to show current weather, integrating hardware like ESP32 and Cloudflare Workers for software layers.
Waveshare has launched the Double Eye LCD module, featuring two 0.71-inch round IPS displays with 160×160 pixels of resolution and 65K color depth, aimed at applications like wearables, robotics, and IoT devices.