A team of embedded engineers and educators on a mission to make electronics and embedded systems accessible, practical, and enjoyable for everyone.
Embedded Projects was created with one clear goal — to give engineers, students, and hobbyists a single reliable destination for practical, hands-on embedded systems content. We believe the best way to learn electronics is by building real things: wiring up circuits, writing firmware, burning code to silicon, and watching it work.
Too many learning resources stop at theory. We go further — every project on this site has been physically built and tested, every code example compiles and runs, and every tutorial is written by people who have made all the mistakes so you don't have to.
Complete embedded builds with circuit diagrams, component lists, source code, and YouTube video demonstrations. Built and tested on real hardware.
In-depth platform guides for Arduino, 8051, ESP8266, and PIC — covering architecture, registers, peripherals, and practical examples.
Clear explanations of digital electronics, analog circuits, power electronics, and communication protocols — with interactive quizzes to test understanding.
Beginner-friendly guides to C, C++, Python, and Verilog — with tool setup instructions, compilation steps, code snippets, and quizzes.
In-depth technical reads on specialist topics — GUI programming, Bluetooth and BLE, hardware switching circuits, and FPGA design — written in plain English.
Every completed project is demonstrated on YouTube — see the hardware working in real life, not just a schematic on a screen.
Theory without practice is incomplete. Every concept on this site is grounded in something you can actually build.
All content is free to access. All source code is published on GitHub under open licences — download, fork, and build on it.
We write for people who are just starting out, while still going deep enough to be useful to experienced engineers.
Every project has been physically built. Every code example has been compiled and run. No copy-paste theory.
Have a question about a project? Spotted an error? Want to suggest a topic? Or just want to say hello — we're happy to hear from you.