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February Dog Dish

from the foundation
Jason Kridner
Gearing up for Summer

I don't know about you, but it was -10°F outside when I woke up this morning. None the less, I'm feeling like summer is just around the corner. Before you know it, we'll be heading back to Maker Faire Bay Area to see the latest in gear using tools like the FastBBP, an open hardware manufacturing controller built around BeagleBone Black's design. We'll also be seeing what students can create by participating in Google Summer of Code. Perhaps a student will extend the prototype of a BeagleBone UI I spoke about last month into a complete electronics learning lab. The question is, what are you doing to gear up for Summer projects?

articles


Time for another Google Summer of Code

By Jason Kridner

GSoC 2015 logo

Google started accepting applications for potential mentoring organizations on February 9th and stops accepting applications on February 20th. BeagleBoard.org has submitted an application. Your help is needed to make that application as strong as it can be!

Need some motivation and inspiration? Check out some of the cool projects that have been executed under BeagleBoard.org's mentorship under the Google Summer of Code in previous years. I've grouped them by some of the typical focus areas where BeagleBoard.org seeks to improve the status of open source software.

Read more »


How does BeagleBone Black compare to Raspberry Pi 2?

By Jason Kridner

As many of you might have heard, Raspberry Pi launched their next board, the Raspberry Pi 2. There have been noticeable differences in the primary processor performance from the original Pi to Pi 2. This has cause a lot of people to revisit the question of how the BeagleBone Black compares to Raspberry Pi.

Read more »

hot off the presses

Learning BeagleBone

Learning BeagleBone

Hunyue Yau has been an active member of the BeagleBoard.org community from the earliest days. As an expert Linux consultant, he has a fair amount of expertise to share with BeagleBone users.


community topics

Driving SeeMeCNC Rostock Max v2 3D printer

John Oly and I spend a few hours this weekend putting together a SeeMeCNC Rostock Max v2 with BeagleBone Black and BeBoPr. We still have a few things to work out, but I wanted to jot down some notes here.

Read more »

Device Tree Quirks & the Beaglebone

Pantelis has continued to patch the mainline kernel to support the device tree features needed to support BeagleBone capes.

Read more »


events

Jason at Southern California Linux Expo - Feb 19-22 more »

element14 at embedded world booth 221, hall 5 - Feb 24-26 more »

Bring-a-hack at Pumping Station: One in Chicago - Feb 25 more »

3D printing with Machinekit at SE Michigan BeagleBone Users Group - Feb 26 more »

Midwest RepRap Fest - Mar 20-22 more »


featured projects

FSL3D
FSL Pegasus Touch

Did you know the Full Spectrum Laser Pegasus Touch stereolithography 3D printer is affordably built around BeagleBone Black?

More Details »


libpruio
libpruio featured on Hackaday

Support for the programmable real-time units (PRUs) on BeagleBone Black is still under heavy development. Fortunately, there are some emerging examples that make using the PRU microcontrollers easier. The 'libpruio' project is an excellent one of those examples

With bindings for FreeBASIC and C, libpruio makes it easy for programmers to take advantage of the PRUs to perform real-time I/O using the on-board analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) and pulse-width modulators (PWMs). It is even possible to use the capture module to measure the frequency and duty-cycle of a pulse train.

The project includes all of the device tree configuration and PRU firmware, so you don't need to worry about programming the PRU yourself. Just kick back and use the simple API and a good number of examples to get all your real-time I/O, without writing a Linux driver or using real-time kernel patches.

More Details »
resources

Github »


Upverter »


Tindie »


BoneScript Library »

 

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