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BACK HERE LIVE, STORE EMPLOYEES WANT TO FIND THIS GUY. THEY ARE NOT AMUSED OF WHAT HAPPENED TODAY. STEVE, SANDRA, BACK TO YOU. MARA, ANY IDEA HOW CLOSE POLICE ARE TO CATCHING THIS GUY? REPORTER: WE HEAR THEY ARE VERY CLOSE AND HAVE AN ID ANDATMega chip on breadboardIf you're like me, after I got my Arduino and performed a final programming on my first chip, I wanted to pull it off my Arduino Duemilanove and put it on my own circuit. This would also free up my Arduino for future projects.The problem was that I'm such an electronics newbie that I didn't know where to start. After reading through many web pages and forums, I was able to put together this Instructable. I wanted to have the information I learned all in one place, and easy to follow.Fellow Instructable member, Janw mentioned to me that it's always a good idea to add a capacitor or 2 near your power. He mentioned using a couple of 100nF capacitors should work. I'm very grateful he pointed this out to me, because my first production circuit that I'm building upon this circuit, was having a little bit of strange behavior. So I hooked up one 10uF capacitor near my power, and it started behaving correctly! I don't know why it didn't affect my 'blinking LED' test, but I do know that I'm grateful for Janw for pointing this out to me. Thanks Janw.Thank you for the kind words. I'm sorry but I've never worked with the WiFi shield before. However, if you look at this page:It looks like it tells you what connects to what. So you can just use jumper wires from the WiFi shield to your breadboarded Arduino (connecting them to the appropriate ATMega328