Analysis updated 2026-05-18
Follow a beginner roadmap from basic electronics components to microcontroller projects
Find starter kit recommendations for tools like multimeters and soldering irons
Discover Brazilian maker communities and hackerspaces to join
| gio-yaml/oficina-tech | 16nic/comfyui-agnes-ai | 521xueweihan/hgdoll | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | 19 | 19 | 19 |
| Language | — | Python | Kotlin |
| Setup difficulty | easy | moderate | hard |
| Complexity | 1/5 | 2/5 | 4/5 |
| Audience | general | vibe coder | developer |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
This is a resource list, not runnable code, content is in Brazilian Portuguese.
Oficina Tech is a curated collection of resources for people who want to learn electronics, hardware hacking, and maker culture by building things rather than reading textbooks. The project is written in Brazilian Portuguese and targets beginners who are curious about how technology works from the inside out, including those who are not sure where to start. The repository covers a wide range of topics: starter kit recommendations for electronics (multimeters, soldering irons, ESP32 boards, Arduino kits), a learning roadmap that goes from basic components like resistors and capacitors to working with microcontrollers and building real projects, and an explanation of what hardware hacking means in practice. Hardware hacking here refers to modifying existing devices beyond their original purpose, such as turning toys into synthesizers, repurposing old screens, or building custom portable computers called cyberdecks. The resource list includes Brazilian maker communities, hackerspaces, YouTube channels in both Portuguese and English, and forums where people share project documentation. The emphasis throughout is on learning by doing, making mistakes, and following your own curiosity rather than following a strict curriculum. The README itself mentions that most people in this space learned by taking things apart at odd hours and experimenting until something worked. The repository is designed as a living archive that anyone can contribute to. It also includes a section highlighting a social technology project called Fala Migo, which builds assistive communication tools for non-verbal autistic children. The overall tone is informal and encouraging, aimed at people who are drawn to creative technology but may feel intimidated by where to begin.
A Brazilian Portuguese resource list for learning electronics, hardware hacking, and maker culture through hands-on projects instead of textbooks.
Setup difficulty is rated easy, with roughly 30min to a first successful run.
Mainly general.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
Verify against the repo before relying on details.