About Dexdextor

An editorial reference covering robotics, microcontrollers, sensors, and electronics project building for hobbyists in Poland.

What this site covers

Dexdextor.eu documents practical approaches to building electronics projects using microcontrollers, single-board computers, and robotics kits. The content focuses on projects relevant to the Polish maker community — including component sourcing from local suppliers, considerations for the local electronics market, and references to maker spaces active in Polish cities.

Coverage spans beginner-level material (first Arduino circuits, sensor wiring, IDE setup) through to intermediate topics including multi-node sensor networks, motor control, computer vision with Raspberry Pi, and ESP32-based IoT systems.

Editorial approach

Articles describe hardware setups, firmware patterns, and configuration steps based on publicly documented specifications, manufacturer datasheets, and widely adopted community practices. No undocumented claims or invented performance figures appear in the content.

Where exact figures depend on specific component batches or environmental conditions, the text uses neutral descriptive language rather than precise numbers. External links point only to official manufacturer documentation, established open-source project sites, or other authoritative technical references.

Language and audience

Content is published in English. The primary audience is hobbyists, students, and technical professionals in Poland who build with electronics as a personal interest or as part of educational projects. The site does not target commercial product sales or professional engineering contexts.

Contact

For editorial questions, corrections, or component sourcing enquiries, use the contact form on the homepage or write to contact@dexdextor.eu.

The site is operated from Warsaw, Poland.

Image attribution

All photographs used on this site are sourced from Wikimedia Commons under Creative Commons licences. Attribution information is available at the linked Wikimedia Commons file pages.