OLED Display Gives a Plant Personality
Houseplant anthropomorphized with happy and sad watering animations.
Gediminas Kirdeikis does not have any pets, but he does have plants. While he things they are “pretty cool,” he also notes that “you can’t really create a connection between you and your plants” as you can with an animal. To help anthropomorphize his quietly growing organism, he built a custom pot with an animation that shows it’s happy when it has sufficient water, or sad when dry.
The project uses a commonly available capacitive moisture sensor to take soil readings, and an Arduino Nano for control. This runs a very simple program that monitors that sensor, and sends array of pixel colors to the plant’s tiny OLED display for animations.
The pot itself is designed in CAD and 3D-printed in two parts in “just” 22 hours. These fit together, and are glued and coated for prevent leakage. It features a slot for the capacitive sensor, along with internal accommodations for the Nano, screen, and USB cable. Some modification of the print was involved, per a too small hole for the USB, and a too big opening for the screen, so there are a few things to revise if Kirdeikisdecides to make another one.
Nonetheless, results seen at around the 9:00 mark in the video look very nice. After plugging it in and adding water, he's greeted with a happily-animated plant icon to indicate that it's sufficiently hydrated!