Since there is only on control, the shutter, it will almost always
just be a SPST switch. This suggests that it really should be quite
easy to do. On things with a scanned keyboard, the CD4016 can be used
to replace the switch closure.
The link refers to a decoder to take a servo drive signal for a remote
control camera on his model aircraft.
I was saying that two cameras can be triggered with one switch and two
diodes to isolate the signals. Not really sure if it is necessary but
am sure it would work - I had a situation where the camera battery was
feeding back into the picaxe and used a diode to isolate it - then
ditched the diode and used a cap and am running both the picaxe and
camera from the same 3 V source.
My goal is a weatherproof time lapse camera, but I've also been toying
with the idea of a stereo camera - since my wife is into that. The
Aiptek is a nice candidate for that too - they supply a little holder
that is designed to make it into a web cam so it will run from the USB
power. Two holders and cameras could easily mount to a bar with a
single screw, a little effort wiring, to make a fancy stereo camera in
about an hour.
The camera turns on when the batteries are connected then it
initializes and is ready to take a picture. If you do nothing it goes
to sleep in three minutes to conserve the battery - then you have to
press another button to wake it up before you can take a shot.
I supply power to the camera via the battery connector under picaxe
control. Wake it up take a shot, time it so the shot goes into
memory, then remove power from the camera - all takes ~25 seconds.
Then the picaxe goes to sleep to conserve power until the next shot.
Timing is set via a series of resistors to get ~10:1 range - that
range can be easily expanded or doctored in software. My time lapse
is currently running 1-10 minutes between pictures.
I'm having way too much fun with this. Parking lots are great for
catching candid shots - if I was younger and more callow, a girls
locker room . . . or to see when our elected officials get to work or
watch traffic, watch plants grow, kite photography, etc..
To calibrate the timing I take an unused pin on the picaxe and send
voltage to a quartz analog clock. Load the calibration program in and
set the clock to 12 and it takes a picture of the clock then takes
another picture of the clock when the "sleep time" is over.