Hello,
Registration is now open for the May meeting, with details and a link
to registration below.
Regards,
Andrew
//
OSHUG #26 — Sensor Networks (Contiki, Low Power Wireless Sensors, quick2link)
Thursday 16th May 2013, 18:00 - 20:00 at Centre for Creative
Collaboration, 16 Acton Street, London, WC1X 9NG.
Sponsored by SK Pang Electronics: http://www.skpang.co.uk
Registration: http://oshug.org/event/26
At the twenty-sixth meeting we will have talks on Contiki, the open
source operating system for the Internet of Things, low power wireless
sensors and quick2link, a protocol for distributed sensor/actuator
networks.
— An Introduction to the Contiki O/S
This talk aims to introduce the Contiki OS and some of the development
hardware that is used with it. We will learn about the process of
bootstrapping the development environment and there will be a hands-on
tutorial.
Ilya Dmitrichenko was born in Soviet Latvia in 1985, grew up and
attended a secondary school there, and moved to UK as soon as Latvia
joined the EU. He attended the biggest university in London and was
rather disappointed with the education, but nevertheless carried on
and had fun working on a final year engineering project which served
as an introduction to the topic of this talk. Ilya is interested in
various aspects of hardware and software, spanning from WSN to DSP and
several other random fields.
* Note that this talk was originally scheduled for OSHUG #15.
— Low Power Wireless Sensors around the Home
Have you ever wondered how much electricity the kettle used this week,
what effect installing that loft insulation had on the temperature of
the living room, or how humid the loft is?
Small low power wireless nodes make it very easy to deploy a network
of sensors to monitor, for example, electrical power, temperature and
humidity around the home or office.
This talk will give practical examples of connecting low power
wireless sensor nodes to the Web using RFM12B/SRF/XRF 433MHz/868MHz
wireless modules, Arduino-based hardware and firmware, and a Raspberry
Pi base station running the Emoncmsopen-source web-application to log,
process and visualise the data. Experience will be drawn from
OpenEnergyMonitor, a project to develop open source energy monitoring
tools to help us relate to our use of energy, energy systems and the
challenge of sustainable energy.
Glyn Hudson is a hardware developer for the OpenEnergyMonitor project.
Together with Trystan Lea he runs the OpenEnergyMonitor website and
online shop. Glyn has a passion for open hardware, sustainable energy
and rock climbing… in no particular order!
— quick2link
quick2link is a very simple, extensible protocol for controlling
distributed sensor/actuator networks. Inspired by Ward Cunningham's
txtzyme project, it grew out of the needs of C3Pi — an experimental
robot. However, it's equally applicable to environmental monitoring
applications. The current implementation uses a Raspberry Pi
controlling Arduino-based slaves but the architecture and much of the
code are hardware-independent.
Romilly Cocking spent the ten years before his 'retirement' as an
agile software developer, coach and trainer. He spent the first two
years of retirement experimenting with robotics. Then Raspberry Pi
came along, and now Romilly works full-time running Quick2Wire.
Note: Please aim to arrive for 18:00 - 18:20 as the event will start
at 18:30 prompt.
Registration: http://oshug.org/event/26