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That's just what I needed, thank you for all your help Gordon!
Our team won Best in Show for our time machine, out of 57 teams, first time an all-female team has won. We are very happy and proud. Video of awards ceremony available here : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=twSjbmGJrnA
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Ooh thank you.
Hack went brilliantly! Our time machine : http://youtu.be/EjgwNEOZt8w
#hackmcr #msf18Awards are not till 7pm so we won't know if we won anything till then, but the judges all told us they were very impressed! We have had so much fun. We didn't managed to deploy it to the cloud in the end but we got it working locally.
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Hi
I have used Puck.connect to get a connection to my Puck. Now I would like to know its four-character Id.
Also, I'd love to find some documentation on the methods available on Puck? In the API documentation there is a section on the Puck class (here: http://www.espruino.com/Reference#Puck) but it seems to be missing a lot of stuff - for instance there is nothing in there about Puck.connect?Cheers
Clare. -
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I think that might be a bit tricky, as I find AWS quite hard to navigate and I'm not actually sure how I would deploy that example to AWS. Also I'm quite short on time so I don't want to get distracted deploying some other thing. The example I have deployed was done via Visual Studio and AWS Toolkit. But the code in my example was taken originally from the following puckjs tutorial, and then edited: https://www.espruino.com/Puck.js+Web+Bluetooth
I have linked to my deployed site above. The identical site works fine when I deploy it on localhost.
The hackathon is Hack Manchester (UK): https://www.hac100.com/event/hack-mcr-18/
Thanks for all the advice!
We gave up on getting it working in the cloud during the hackathon - we decided to focus on other more pressing matters. But the advice is all useful and I will probably return to it at some point. :)