No, you can't use electronics BUT as Shavuos is what is called a Yom Tov - festival it is more lenient than Shabbos and you may cook from an existing flame ... so if you left your oven on a time switch you would be able to cook in it on Shavuot
Shavuot is a Jewish religious holiday.
The Shavuot celebration originated in Israel and they celebrate a feast.
No. Tefillin are not worn on holidays, including Shavuot, or on the Sabbath.
Shavuot (mistranslated as Pentecost) was fifty days after the Passover. Still is.
No. Anything dairy is traditional on Shavuot, especially blintzes.
Electronics use compounds but also alloys.
Shavuot is recognized as a festival by all branches of Judaism, Orthodox, Reform, Conserviative. However, of the three pilgrimage festivals, it is the most frequently ignored. (Despite the good food, since cheesecake is a traditioinal food for Shavuot.) I have been to Orthodox synagogues where hardly anyone showed up for Shavuot, and I have been to Reform synagogues that were crowded on Shavuot. Even so it is probable that more Orthodox Jews take Shavuot seriously.
Electronics use ultrapure crystals and reagents.
Yes, Shavuot is a Jewish holy day/festival (Leviticus ch.23).
in electronics we use DC current but in elctrical equipment we use AC current
The custom is not to pray all night, but to study all night. Shavuot is considered to be the anniversary of the Giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai. Tikkun Leil Shavuot is the custom of staying up the entire night (leil) of Shavuot studying with the community in order to reexperience standing at Sinai.
A rabbi