diff --git a/docs/examples/Sonos display.md b/docs/examples/Sonos display.md index 0bd6b868..dcd3d9b2 100644 --- a/docs/examples/Sonos display.md +++ b/docs/examples/Sonos display.md @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ Using ControllerX - Controlling your Sonos speakers have never been easier 😎 All it takes is an ESP8266 with ESPHome software, an appropriate display, a handful of HA sensors and you’re all set to go πŸš€ ESPHome is a system framework for ESP8266 units that has support for several I2C OLED/E-ink display types and numerous sensors, has direct HA integration via add-on and easy, yet powerful YAML configuration. Read more about ESPHome and how to set it up in HA here: https://esphome.io/ ### Hardware: -I initially used the simple and inexpensive (below 2 US$ ) SSD1306 0,96" OLED display for this build. Resolution is only 128x64. But still enough, when using several pages to be displayed continously. The SSD1306 has a 'big brother' in the SSD1309 display. This display has identical resolution, is priced at some 14 US$, can use same drivers/library as SSD1306 but is much, much larger at 2,42". I really like this good sized and simple I2C display and ended up using this display in the final build, as it's much easier to read from a distance πŸ™‚ +I initially used the simple and inexpensive (less than 2 US$ ) SSD1306 0,96" OLED display for this build. Resolution is only 128x64. But still enough, when using several pages to be displayed continously. The SSD1306 has a 'big brother' in the SSD1309 display. This display has identical resolution, is priced at some 14 US$, can use same drivers/library as SSD1306 but is much, much larger at 2,42". I really like this good sized and simple I2C display and ended up using this display in the final build, as it's much easier to read from a distance πŸ™‚ Some links examples for hardware below. These are just some random sellers I've picked. Not necessarily the cheapest or best sellers. @@ -416,10 +416,10 @@ _[@htvekov](https://github.com/htvekov)_ \ No newline at end of file