Ambient Display Tells You If Borealis Is Coming To Town

A wooden box sits on a darker wooden table. The box has a red, glowing number 8 on it.

For those times when you’d rather not get sucked down another internet rabbit hole when you really just wanted the weather, an ambient display can be great. [AlexanderK106] built a simple ambient display to know the probability the Northern Lights would visit his town.

Starting with a NodeMCU featuring the ESP8266, [AlexanderK106] walks us through a beginner-friendly tutorial on how to do everything from configure the Arduino IDE, the basics of using a breadboard. finding a data source and parsing it, and finally sticking everything into an enclosure.

The 7-segment display is taped and set into the back of the 1/4″ pine with enough brightness to shine through the additional layer of veneer on top. The display is set to show one digit and then the next before a three second repeat. A second display would probably make this easier to use day-to-day, but we appreciate him keeping it simple for this tutorial.

Looking for more ambient displays? Checkout the Tempescope or this clock that lets you feel the temperature outside!

8 thoughts on “Ambient Display Tells You If Borealis Is Coming To Town

  1. I would love something like that!
    Aurorae are rare enough around here that I don’t bother to check the forecasts, and then I find out that I have missed one.

  2. Looks like a fun project to pay with a whole bunch of different things!

    However: “The 7-segment display is taped and glued onto the back of the 1/4″ pine with enough brightness to shine through even with the additional layer of veneer on top.”

    Y’all should read more carefully: the front was cut out to mount the display flush with the outside face, then a layer of veneer put over it to act as a diffuser. The display isn’t being driven hard enough to shine through 1/4″ pine.

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