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DTSTART:20140417T140000Z
DTEND:20140417T150000Z
LOCATION:Online - Webex
SUMMARY:Elektor Academy - From Arduino Uno to BeagleBone Black (and back)!
DESCRIPTION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:BqoBIcH.png For the average Embedded software person it&#39;s quite painful to create (or let others create) prototyping hardware in order to write software which talks to sensors and actuators. On the one hand it&#39;s quite straightforward to build up some hardware and write test software with libraries available for the Arduino UNO, on the other hand it&#39;s not that easy to do the same thing &quot;right&quot; in Embedded Linux. Wouldn&#39;t it be nice to reuse this tested hardware prototype and write code for Embedded Linux to talk to it? I intentionally don&#39;t want to use Arduino wrapping libraries on Linux since those are typically not industrial strength, but targeted towards hobbyists. This is what&#39;s going to be presented here. BTW the prototyping hardware is not only able to convert signal levels from an Arduino UNO (shield) to a Beagle Bone, but also to convert signal levels from a Beagle Bone (cape) to an Arduino UNO if that&#39;s needed. Presenter: Robert Berger Robert Berger is a highly respected and experienced embedded real-time expert and CEO of Reliable Embedded Systems [1], a leading embedded training consultancy. Robert consults and trains people all over the globe on a mission to help them create better embedded software. He specializes in training and consulting for embedded systems, from small real-time systems to multi-core embedded Linux. [1] http://www.reliableembeddedsystems.com/misc/about.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><body><div style="padding-bottom:5px;"><a href="http://i.imgur.com/BqoBIcH.png"><a href="http://i.imgur.com/BqoBIcH.png">BqoBIcH.png</a></a><strong>For the average Embedded software person it&#39;s quite painful to create (or let others create) prototyping hardware in order to write software which talks to sensors and actuators.</strong> On the one hand it&#39;s quite straightforward to build up some hardware and write test software with libraries available for the Arduino UNO, on the other hand it&#39;s not that easy to do the same thing &quot;right&quot; in Embedded Linux. Wouldn&#39;t it be nice to reuse this tested hardware prototype and write code for Embedded Linux to talk to it? I intentionally don&#39;t want to use Arduino wrapping libraries on Linux since those are typically not industrial strength, but targeted towards hobbyists. This is what&#39;s going to be presented here. BTW the prototyping hardware is not only able to convert signal levels from an Arduino UNO (shield) to a Beagle Bone, but also to convert signal levels from a Beagle Bone (cape) to an Arduino UNO if that&#39;s needed.</div><div style="padding-bottom:5px;font-size:1.2em;font-weight:bold;">Presenter: Robert Berger</div><div style="padding-bottom:5px;">Robert Berger is a highly respected and experienced embedded real-time expert and CEO of Reliable Embedded Systems [1], a leading embedded training consultancy. Robert consults and trains people all over the globe on a mission to help them create better embedded software. He specializes in training and consulting for embedded systems, from small real-time systems to multi-core embedded Linux.</div><div style="padding-bottom:5px;">[1] <a class="jive-link-external-small" href="http://www.reliableembeddedsystems.com/misc/about.html" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" target="_blank">http://www.reliableembeddedsystems.com/misc/about.html</a></div></body></html>
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