I’m looking for a radio alarm clock project that I could do with a Raspberry Pi or a NodeMCU (ESP32/ESP8266), a small LCD screen and a small speaker.

Do you have any ideas? Does it exist? If not, how should I approach the project? Any advice on speakers for the Raspberry Pi?

  • sin_free_for_00_days@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    Any USB speaker would probably be fine. Even bluetooth speakers shoudl be fine. Then just run some alarm app and you’re good to go. You could make it more complicated by coding your own little alarm script, but if all you want is functionality, just install an app and be done with it. You could plug in a screen to set it up, but after that it would be easy to just have a headless pi sitting in a corner doing it’s thing. SSH in when you want to change something.

    This is a project you should be able to finish in less than an hour. Maybe get a SDR antenna if you want to be a little retro.

  • M-Reimer@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Depends on your needs. My solution to this problem was buying a cheap DAB+ radio, hooking it up to an amplifier that I pulled out of a dumpster a while ago and drive two bookshelf speakers with that. All this is hooked up to a simple timer switch. Great sound and can go freaking loud.

    • thisn@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      You could go a step further and use a wifi switch, with that you could change the “alarm times” and for how long it should stay on right from your phone.

      Shelly does have some nice options for wifi relay switches

      • Markaos@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        It’s probably also worth noting that pretty much all of these WiFi switches rely on their manufacturer’s servers to keep working. If that company goes belly up or simply decides it no longer wants to pay to keep these devices functional, the switch becomes a paperweight.

        • thisn@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          You are right, it is a big issue, especially with all those tuya variants. Which is exactly why I recommended shelly. :)

          The shellys do come with an embedded web server to access it’s features locally, even MQTT is possible in the dedault firmware. And if you truly dislike propietary software/firmware it is also possible to upload your own firmwares (tasmota or esphome) without any soldering needed