555|DELAY|TIMER|FUSE|INST, SUMM
REGS:328P, 84
|AVR-AS|NOTES:328P,84
MCU Predefines: io328p.h, iotnx4.h, iotn85.h, ATtiny Series-1: iotn414.h
ACES EAGLE SMT RESOURCES: ACES_SMT.lbr (2020 01 10), ACES_SMT.dru, ACES_SMT.cam, JLCPCB.dru
ACES Alumni Blogs/Companies: Ethan M '18, Ethan P '18, Dan R '19, Mariano E. '15
2026-2027 TEJ4M: OPTIMIZATION
+/- 9V Wien-Bridge Oscillator
APRIL - MAY: DOUBLE DRAGON COLLABORATION
EASTER LONG WEEKEND (April 3-6)
FAMILY DAY WEEKEND (February 13-16)
CHRISTMAS BREAK (December 18 - January 5)
DECEMBER: CHUMP Enhancement and Introduction to Waveform Generation
DECEMBER: ISP.CHUMP IV: RAM, Mux, Address, Accumulator and Control EEPROM
MOVEMBER: ISP.Long Previews and CHUMP III: ALU
PARENT-TEACHER INTERVIEWS (November 13 and 14)
MID-TERM BREAK (NOVEMBER 7-10) Classes Resume on Tuesday November 11 (Cycle 1 - Day 5)
OCTOBER: ISP.Long and CHUMP II: Clock, Code, Counter and EEPROM
SEPTEMBERish: Charlieplex Clock and CHUMP I - Introduction and Design: Clock, Counter
THANKSGIVING LONG WEEKEND (October 11-14)
CURRICULUM NIGHT (October 6)

Theory is when you know everything but nothing works.
Practice is when everything works, but you don’t know why.
In the lab, theory and practice are combined.
Nothing works, and nobody knows why.

SEPTEMBER: Charlieplexing
CLASS REFERENCE SUPPORT CONCEPTS SUPPLEMENTAL
1
Sep 10

2026/2027
ACES' Program

Our ACES' Program: Contradictions
Student Outline
Mr. D's Timetable

TA Discussion
ACES Hall of Fame:
R. Jamal '25
Schulich Leader: Xander Chin '22
J. Dolgin '20 (Tesla),
E. Peterson '18 (Jane St. Capital),
E. McAuliffe '18,
P. Bagga (Ford),
Mariano Elia '15:
Hackster.io, Argon Prototypes
Day Calendar
Distribution of and Workbooks


Jumper Wire
Supplements
(0.3" and 0.4")
3.0
SMD Practice


3.1
Charlieplexing:
4-Way Traffic Light

I have no formal training in electronics or electrical engineering - I'm just really interested in this field. The knowledge and skill I have has been largely acquired over the last few years from learning alongside many talented Georgians and I look forward to expanding my capabilities by working with you this year.
I ask six things of my ACES (for most other things I'm usually flexible):
1. Do not cheat.
2. Show respect for adult visitors that enter the DES by immediately stopping what you are doing, standing and facing the individual(s).
3. Show respect for the lab by not eating in the DES. You may go into the hallway for a quick bite if you need to.
4. Show respect for the lab's resources by not wasting or misusing them.
5. Show respect for others that use the lab by putting your projects away and leaving your bench area tidy when you leave.
6. Show respect for yourself by looking (and speaking) your best. It's the little things keep the doors of opportunity open.
Growing Success, p. 29
Responsibility, Organization, Independent Work, Collaboration, Initiative, Self-Reliant Growing Success. p.11.

It is worth noting, right from the start, that assessment is a human process, conducted by and with human beings, and subject inevitably to the frailties of human judgment.
However crisp and objective we might try to make it, and however neatly quantifiable may be our "results", assessment is closer to art than science.
It is, after all, an exercise in human communication.
Knowledge: Subject-specific content acquired in each course (knowledge), and the comprehension of its meaning and significance (understanding).
Thinking: The use of critical and creative thinking skills and/or processes, as follows:
Communication: The conveying of meaning through various forms, as follows:
Application: The use of knowledge and skills to make connections within and between various contexts.