Snap4Arduino was a Snap! extension, a full Snap! implementation to interact with the physical world, through many types of electronic devices, especially those compatible with Arduino. Starting with Snap! v11, the S4A Connector library is doing this job.
Snap! is a broadly inviting programming language for kids and adults that's also a platform for serious study of computer science. It is inspired by Scratch, written by Jens Mönig and Brian Harvey and presented by the University of California at Berkeley.
Snap4Arduino requiere boards with Firmata firmware installed. Check devices section.
Just download, unpack/unzpip and click Snap4Arduino.
Choose your system: Windows 64 (or its portable option), GNU/Linux 64, MacOSX, Windows32 (or its portable) or GNU/Linux 32.
Install Snap4Arduino connector and then, just play Snap4Arduino online (you can install it as an app from the browser to run it offline).
Chromium/Chrome/Edge browsers are required
Download Snap4Arduino connector, unzip its crx folder, type chrome://extensions, select Developer mode and Upload an unpacked extension selecting that crx file (or just drag and drop it).
Just play Snap4Arduino online (you can install it as an app from the browser to run it offline).
Play online
Plugin for Chromebooks (chrome web store)
Chrome/Chromium/Edge plugin (download extension)
Last Snap4Arduino version is 10.3.6 (released on 08/01/2025) and its Snap4Arduino connector version (chrome extension)is 8.0
You can also find older releases and unmaintained versions
Snap4Arduino requires boards with Firmata firmware uploaded.
You can upload Firmata firmwares direcly from Snap4Arduino (with both desktop and online versions) to UNOs compatible boards. Or just here:
A lot of devices support Standard Firmata. Tested on Nano, Mega, Leonardo and Micro.
Many 32 bit devices support Firmata. Tested on Due, 101, ESP8266 and NodeMCU.
Standard Firmata is directly uploadable with any Arduino IDE.
Other options are: SA5Firmata, Creative Robotix Firmata, MC Firmata Collection, Robotics-unleashed, Snap4ArduinoDev, LCD Firmata and Ultrasound Firmata
India is the birthplace of and Ayurveda , but the modern interpretation is fascinating. In 2025, the Indian wellness seeker isn't just doing Surya Namaskar at sunrise; they are coupling it with intermittent fasting and nootropic coffee.
The inclusion of in older web searches highlights a very specific era of the internet.
The "flv" in the search term is a significant piece of internet history. FLV stands for , a container format developed by Macromedia and released in 2002. At the time, internet speeds were slow, and high-quality video was difficult to stream. The FLV format became the de facto standard for web-based video because it produced files that were extremely small and loaded very quickly, making online video streaming a practical reality. The FLV format was integral to the rise of early video-sharing websites before HTML5 and MP4 became the norm. Finding a video in this format is like finding a "digital fossil" from the early days of YouTube, which was only founded in 2005. The search for a "Namitha hot video" in FLV format tells us that the content was originally created for the internet of the mid-2000s.
Content focusing on handloom fabrics like Khadi, Banarasi silk, and Chikankari educates consumers on the value of heritage textiles.
You can find our GitHub repo at Snap4Arduino@GitHub. Please feel free to send us your pull requests and participate in reporting, fixing or commenting on bugs!
India is the birthplace of and Ayurveda , but the modern interpretation is fascinating. In 2025, the Indian wellness seeker isn't just doing Surya Namaskar at sunrise; they are coupling it with intermittent fasting and nootropic coffee.
The inclusion of in older web searches highlights a very specific era of the internet.
The "flv" in the search term is a significant piece of internet history. FLV stands for , a container format developed by Macromedia and released in 2002. At the time, internet speeds were slow, and high-quality video was difficult to stream. The FLV format became the de facto standard for web-based video because it produced files that were extremely small and loaded very quickly, making online video streaming a practical reality. The FLV format was integral to the rise of early video-sharing websites before HTML5 and MP4 became the norm. Finding a video in this format is like finding a "digital fossil" from the early days of YouTube, which was only founded in 2005. The search for a "Namitha hot video" in FLV format tells us that the content was originally created for the internet of the mid-2000s.
Content focusing on handloom fabrics like Khadi, Banarasi silk, and Chikankari educates consumers on the value of heritage textiles.