https://github.com/thingpulse/espaper-weatherstation
WeatherStation for the 2.9" ESPaper modules
https://github.com/thingpulse/espaper-weatherstation
Last synced: 5 months ago
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WeatherStation for the 2.9" ESPaper modules
- Host: GitHub
- URL: https://github.com/thingpulse/espaper-weatherstation
- Owner: ThingPulse
- License: mit
- Created: 2017-09-27T14:30:19.000Z (over 8 years ago)
- Default Branch: master
- Last Pushed: 2022-01-04T21:12:39.000Z (about 4 years ago)
- Last Synced: 2025-05-01T17:31:44.735Z (11 months ago)
- Language: C
- Homepage: https://thingpulse.com/product-category/espaper-epaper-kits/
- Size: 147 KB
- Stars: 91
- Watchers: 18
- Forks: 46
- Open Issues: 0
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Metadata Files:
- Readme: README.md
- Contributing: CONTRIBUTING.md
- License: LICENSE
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README
# ThingPulse ESPaper Weather Station
[](https://thingpulse.com)
ESPaper Weather Station with a passive e-paper display
[](https://thingpulse.com/product-category/espaper-epaper-kits/)
## Service level promise
This is a ThingPulse prime project. See our open-source commitment declaration for what this means.
## Step-by-step tutorial
A complete step-by-step tutorial/guide is available at [https://docs.thingpulse.com/guides/espaper-plus-kit/](https://docs.thingpulse.com/guides/espaper-plus-kit/).
## Licensing, contributions and maintenance
The code in this repository is licensed under [MIT](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIT_License), a short and simple permissive license with conditions only requiring preservation of copyright and license notices. Thus, you're free to fork the project and use the code for your own projects as long as you keep the copyright notices in place.
ThingPulse is committed to open-source development and will continue to maintain this code. We welcome contributions from the community given they are roughly in line with our [guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md). However, please understand that we primarily developed this application to be run on our own hardware kit mentioned above. It's the only platform we regularly test the code against. You are of course free to run the code on any hardware you think is compatible but you have to rely on community support should you run into problems.
ThingPulse runs a support forum for its customers that is better suited to answering user questions than the issues list here.