is there any other option for accommodation less comfortable and/or cheaper?
Regards.
On Fri, Aug 10, 2012 at 1:00 PM, <oshug-request(a)oshug.org> wrote:
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> 1. OSHCamp 2012 update. (Andrew Back)
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> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 10 Aug 2012 11:25:20 +0100
> From: Andrew Back <arback(a)computer.org>
> To: Open Source Hardware User Group Discussion List <oshug(a)oshug.org>
> Subject: [oshug] OSHCamp 2012 update.
> Message-ID:
> <
> CADj1OPD-FcFr-aP9Noi_Gn4cEUL4w0HUtDh_jHA25EFzUY50WQ(a)mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>
> Hello,
>
> I just wanted to let folks know that OSHCamp is now at half capacity
> with 50 people registered and over a month still to go. So if you are
> planning to attend it may be advisable not to leave it to the last
> minute to book.
>
> With regards accommodation, for those that prefer the comforts of a
> B&B or a hotel:
>
> The Angeldale is very central and quite reasonably priced:
>
> http://www.angeldale.co.uk/
>
> The White Lion Hotel is perhaps a bit more upmarket, the food looks
> great and I can vouch that the beer is well kept:
>
> http://www.whitelionhotel.net/
>
> And groups may wish to consider booking an apartment (although you
> could also book a 4 bed room at the hostel):
>
> http://www.croftmill.com/
>
> As ever, happy to answer any questions direct or via the list.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Andrew
>
> PS. We have a 10th talk confirmed for the Saturday, on the OpenRelief
> CTOL open source UAV airframe (which will be brought along!)
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
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> End of oshug Digest, Vol 29, Issue 1
> ************************************
>
Hello,
Registration is now live for this year's OSHCamp, details of which are
pasted below. The cost for attending is £10, but this includes lunch
and tea/coffee on the Saturday, and there will be an OSHCamp goody bag
kindly supplied by SK Pang and Oomlout.
For those that require accommodation the Hebden Bridge Hostel
(http://www.hebdenbridgehostel.co.uk/) adjoins the venue and looks
pretty good. Most of the dorms are 4 bed and discounts are available
for group bookings, plus they also have double/twin rooms. And for
those on a very tight budget a dorm bunk can be had for £12.50,
although this does require that you bring a sleeping bag.
Further local information will be posted here and/or to the website in
due course, and there will be some sort of social event on the
Saturday evening (a round about way of saying the pub!)
Please post any questions to the list, or to me direct if you prefer.
Cheers,
Andrew
// Open Source Hardware Camp 2012
On the 15th September 2012, 09:00 - 16th September 2012, 16:00 at The
Birchcliffe Centre, Birchcliffe Road, Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire,
HX7 8DG, UK
— Registration: http://oshug.org/event/oshcamp2012
Open Source Hardware Camp 2012 will take place place in the north of
England in the Pennine town of Hebden Bridge. Building on the success
of last year's OSHCamp, it will be a weekend long event with nine
talks on the Saturday and four parallel workshops on the Sunday.
Hebden Bridge is approximately 1 hour by rail from Leeds and
Manchester. Budget accommodation is available at the Hebden Bridge
Hostel which adjoins the venue, with discounts available for group
bookings.
- Practical Experiences with the Google Android Accessory Development Kit (ADK)
The ADK is an exciting development platform that makes it possible to
easily combine Android applications with custom hardware built around
Arduino. Such combinations have the best of both worlds by enabling
the creation of a mobile phone application with access to peripheral
devices that is only limited by your imagination.
This talk will cover two projects that extend what the phone can do by
integrating both input and output devices. And will cover some of the
dos and don'ts of using the ADK and associated IDEs. If time permits
there will also be a demonstration with a quick run through of the
code.
Paul Tanner is a consultant, developer and maker in wood, metal,
plastic, electronics and software. His day job is IT-based business
improvement for SMEs. By night he turns energy nut, creating tools to
optimise energy use. Paul graduated in electronics and was responsible
for hardware and software product development and customer services in
several product and service start-ups, switching to consulting in
2000.
If you can't wait to get your hands on the ADK software browse to
http://developer.android.com/tools/adk.
- The Internet of Things and Arduino
As connecting hardware to the network becomes cheaper and cheaper
we're seeing the rise of what is being called the Internet of Things,
or “IoT” for short.
This talk will give an introduction to the Internet of Things and
explain how open hardware platforms such as Arduino are helping it
grow. With plenty of examples of IoT projects, from using sensors to
map global radiation levels to bakeries that tweet when the bread is
fresh out of the oven.
Adrian McEwen has been connecting odd things to the Internet since the
mid-90s. Starting with cash registers, and then as part of the team
who were first to put a web browser onto a mobile phone. As the mobile
phone and set-top box work became more mainstream he dropped down a
level to Arduino which led to Internet-enabled bubble machines and
chicken-food silos...
Adrian has been working with Arduino since 2008 — which is when
Bubblino, the aforementioned bubble machine which watches twitter, was
created — and is charge of the Arduino Ethernet library. He is based
in Liverpool, where he runs MCQN Ltd, a company that builds IoT
devices and products.
- Developing Linux on Embedded Devices
This talk will provide an introduction to developing Linux on embedded
devices. Firstly we will look at the capabilities of popular boards
such as the BeagleBone and the Raspberry Pi. Then using the example of
a BeagleBone controller for a 3D printer the talk with explain how to
develop for an embedded device. It will consider what comprises an
embedded Linux software stack. The talk will discuss boot loaders,
kernels and root filesystems. We will discuss what are the minimum
software packages required in a root file system. The talk will then
go on to consider the tools required to develop for an embedded
target. It will look at what tools are available to help the embedded
developer and speed up this development process. Once you have
developed your software you need to debug it. The talk will look at
what debugging tools are available for debugging embedded devices.
Melanie Rhianna Lewis started a life long love of electronics as a
child when her Dad helped her make a "crystal" radio with an ear
piece, a coil of wire, a diode and a radiator! At the same time the
home computer revolution started and she would lust after the "build
your own computers" advertised in the electronics magazines of the
time. She never got one but did end up the proud owner of a BBC Micro.
Melanie learnt everything she could about the machine and including
assembler, operating systems, drivers, interrupt, and, thanks to the
circuit diagram in the Advanced User Guide, digital electronics. After
the BBC Micro came the Acorn Archimedes and so started a long
relationship with ARM processors. In the 90s Melanie became interested
in Linux and then developed one of the first ARM Linux distributions
running on an Acorn RISC PC. The hobby became a job and Melanie
currently works for an embedded device consultancy near Bradford where
a lot of her work is still with ARM processors.
- Interfacing the Raspberry Pi to the World — Everything you need to
know about P1
You've received your Pi, set up a web server on it and maybe played a
few rounds of Quake. You're looking for a new challenge and suddenly
the header on the corner of the board catches your eye. A quick Google
search for "P1 Raspbery Pi" gets you to the eLinux wiki page on Low
level peripherals, and you suddenly realise that you can do all sorts
of fun stuff by adding extra bits to your Raspberry Pi using this
magical expansion port. Where do you start? Is it safe to connect a
motor directly to the pins? What sort of interesting components are
out there?
In this talk we will look at the ways we can communicate with the
outside world using the GPIO pins on the Raspberry Pi. We will explore
the mechanical, electrical and software side of things and talk about
a few example projects you can try at home, and the hardware
limitations will be covered and workarounds provided.
Omer Kilic is theoretically still a research student at the University
of Kent, although he intends to submit his thesis (which is about a
reconfigurable heterogeneous computing framework) pretty soon. He
likes tiny computers, things that 'just work' and beer. He currently
works for Erlang Solutions in London, exploring the use of Erlang
programming language in the Embedded Systems domain and develops tools
and support material to help the adoption of this technology.
This talk will also serve as an introduction for the Raspberry Pi
workshop on the Sunday, where we will explore the example projects
covered in more detail.
- Sensing Wearable Technology
An introduction to wearable technology that will include examples
which incorporate sensors, plus work which makes use of the LilyPad
Arduino, an open source, sewable microcontroller.
Rain Ashford creates wearable technology & electronic art, her most
recent work involves investigating physiological sensing technologies
and how they can be applied to wearable artworks to measure and
interpret moods, health and lifestyle data. Rain also creates fun,
interactive and aesthetically pleasing works that include gaming and
musical elements. She is keen to demonstrate that electronics,
components and circuitry doesn't have to be regarded as cold, boring,
hard and boxy and instead can be fun, colourful and elegant, plus be
integrated into an overall design of a work.
Rain’s background is in developing online activities for the BBC as a
Senior Producer at BBC Learning and also as Technologist at BBC R&D,
co-running BBC Backstage. She currently works as a freelance
consultant for the Open University and for Technocamps designing and
leading workshops in coding and electronics in the form of wearable
technology for 11-19 year-olds, plus is a PhD researcher, peering into
wearable electronics & art.
- Running OpenBTS in the Real World
This talk will explore the OpenBTS project and describe how it uses
software-defined radio and open source Internet telephony to create a
small but complete GSM mobile phone network.
Experiences of operating OpenBTS installations on the Pacific island
of Niue and at the Burning Man festival in the Nevada desert will be
covered, along with how OpenBTS has been integrated with other systems
for use in disaster relief. Licensing permitting there will also be a
live demonstration.
Tim Panton is a software engineer with a particular interest in
projects that blend web applications and person-to-person speech into
an integrated user experience. He has many years hands-on experience
with the OpenBTS project, working closely with the core development
team on numerous installations.
Tim is currently working on the Phono.com, Tropo.com and Rayo.org
products at VoxeoLabs, producing web developer-friendly APIs by using
XMPP protocols to drive innovative telephony applications that can be
used anywhere by anyone.
- The 3D Printed Revolution
Over recent years Open Source 3D printers have quickly developed
alongside their commercial counterparts offering affordable and
accessible alternatives. This talk will cover experiences using
commercial printers and how the speaker's interests have moved to open
source designs and how the two compare. Examples will be shown of
projects using these technologies, such as "Fable", a clock
manufactured by Selective Laser Sintering, and a wrist watch designed
to be printed on a RepRap. There will also be a run through of the
design considerations and how files were created, fixed and sliced in
preparation to print on a RepRap.
Mark Gilbert graduated in 2000 from Sheffield Hallam University with a
degree in Industrial Design Innovation. After several years working as
a design engineer, Mark started working as a freelance industrial
designer for several companies in the Northwest. Over the last 6 years
he has also worked closely with the Bolton Science and Technology
Centre as the "Designer in Residence" where he has developed workshops
around the centre's 3D printing and CAD facilities.
In 2008 Mark set up the design studio Gilbert13 with his wife Angela
where they design and develop products inspired by experimentation
into digital manufacturing processes, 3D printing and additive
manufacturing. Recent projects have taken their experience from rapid
prototyping to use 3D printing as a manufacturing tool that can change
the way people design, co create and distribute objects.
- The Bots are Coming
In the last two decades we have seen software and data change the
fabric of economics, and the advent of personal computing and the
Internet enable many new business models. However, the next two
decades will be even more radical as that wave of innovation shifts
from the virtual domain to a physical manifestation. Atoms are the new
bits and the open sourcing and democratisation of bot technology is
allowing us to enter into an era of personal production. And this talk
will explore how 3D printing and additive manufacturing are
revolutionising production as we know it.
Alan Wood originally trained in systems engineering, got lost in
software engineering and open source for a decade, before returning
back to his hardware roots via the open source hardware and makers
movement that has gathered momentum over the last few years.
- DIYBIO - The Next Frontier
DIYBIOMCR is an public group based at MadLab dedicated to making
biology an accessible pursuit for citizen scientists, amateur
biologists and biological engineers who value openness and safety.
This talk will give an overview of the movement, and what is going on
at MadLab involving not only biology but also diverse fields such as
hardware-hackers, artists, journalists and the open-source movement.
Hwa Young Jung is a co-founder and a director of MadLab, a community
centre for creative, tech and science based the Manchester. Over 50
user groups meet once a month, including DIYBIOMCR, initially a joint
funded project with MMU and the Wellcome Trust.
** Sunday Workshops
Workshops will be reasonably informal and shaped by the participants,
and details are subject to change depending upon the level of interest
expressed.
Please feel free to bring along equipment and components provided that
you are able to take full responsibility for your own personal safety
and that of others. Common sense should be exercised!
- Practical IoT Applications with the Google ADK and Arduino
Hands on IoT building sessions that follow on from Saturday's ADK and
Arduino talks.
- Interfacing the Raspberry Pi to the World
- Here you will learn how to connect a selection of devices to your
Raspberry Pi utilising the methods discussed during Saturday's talk.
We will have a few Raspberry Pi boards available for the workshop but
please bring your own if you were one of the lucky ones to have
received one.
- Building GSM Networks with Open Source
A look at the practical steps involved in creating a low power GSM
network using open source technology.
Note: this workshop will be subject to a spectrum licence being granted.
- Practical 3D Printing
Details TBC.
Note:
* Please aim to arrive for 09:00 on the Saturday as the event will
start at 09:30 prompt.
* A light lunch and refreshments will be provided on the Saturday.
Sponsored by:
Capital SCF: http://www.capitalscf.com
DesignSpark: http://www.designspark.com
Cosm: https://cosm.com
OSHCamp kit bags provided by:
SK Pang: http://www.skpang.co.uk
Oomlout: http://oomlout.com
Hello,
The next OSHUG meeting will be on Thursday 21st June. Details and
registration link below.
Regards,
Andrew
//
OSHUG #20 — Drones (UDB4, OpenRelief, ARDrone + Kinect)
On the 21st June 2012, 18:00 - 20:00 at Centre for Creative
Collaboration, 16 Acton Street, London, WC1X 9NG (51.529049,
-0.116436)
Sponsored by Embecosm: http://www.embecosm.com
— Registration: http://oshug.org/event/20
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), or drones, are increasingly making
the news, but when they do so it's usually because of their use in
warfare. However, drones can be put to use in many other, far more
positive applications. And at the twentieth OSHUG meeting we will hear
talks on an experimental attitude and heading reference system (AHRS),
using open source technology to build drones for use in disaster
relief, and on a fun and novel method of flying drones via gesture
control.
- Using UDB4 for an Experimental AHRS
The UAV Development Board is a very versatile development board that
has been around for the past five or so years, and which has been
supported by small team led by William Premerlani. The board comes
with a dsPIC30F4011 microcontroller, an MMA7260 three axis
accelerometer and two dual-axis Inversense IXZ500 gyroscopes. It has
supported various forms of platforms ranging from inverted pendulums
to multicoptors. It has primarily been a development platform for
experimenters and it is in its fourth major revision.
The talk intends to give a high level view of the MatrixPilot firmware
as a general introduction to autopilots, with a demonstration of the
Hardware in loop simulation to show how it behaves in flight for a
fixed wing aircraft.
Anish Mohammed has been an electronics hobbyist and software hacker
since his early teens. He spent almost a decade in research and
development in security and cryptography, and these days he works for
the Big Five in consulting. He is a confirmed UAV addict who owns a
dozen AHRS/Autopilots, both open and partially closed, with interests
in multicopters, fixed wings and rovers.
- OpenRelief — Open Source Software and Open Hardware For Frontline
Disaster Relief
This talk will explore how the OpenRelief team, inspired by challenges
seen during the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake, is using Open Source Software
and Open Hardware to create disaster relief tools. The first step is
to develop a small drone that can take off from anywhere, recognize
roads, people and smoke while also measuring weather and radiation. It
can be built for less than 1,000 USD, and easily shares information
with Open Source and proprietary disaster management systems. The goal
is to gather critical information for relief workers on the ground,
and contribute to getting aid where it is needed.
Karl Lattimer is an engineer who started early with electronics and
programming, and has worked on all kinds of projects for many
companies developing software to solve a wide variety of problems. He
currently works for Codethink Ltd, an engineering firm based in
Manchester, UK. Karl is enthusiastic about Artificial Intelligence,
Computer Vision, Robotics and related engineering disciplines. He is a
firm believer that we can engineer a future that is more sustainable,
adaptive and integrated. His interest in OpenRelief stems from a
desire to engineer solutions to the problems faced in disaster
scenarios, and the desire to drive the permeation of robots into our
everyday lives.
- Flying an ARDrone Like a 7-year Old Child
Controlling a Parrot ARDrone using URBI, python and an MS Kinect
camera, allowing people to fly it by holding their arms out and
pretending to be an airplane like a small child. This was in truth an
exploration in how to couple independent projects and to explore and
exploit the APIs presented by the kinect and the drone's software.
Ben O'Steen is a freelance developer with an interest in the fuzzy
divide between physical and digital spaces, such as how we perceive
and use objects differently based on how they are (re)produced,
presented or controlled. Currently, he can be found working on digital
library and archive projects for academic institutions, art
installations and his newly completed 3d printer.
— Registration: http://oshug.org/event/20
Hello,
As many of you know the plan is to hold this year's OSHCamp in the
north of England in Hebden Bridge, which is a pretty town (I might be
biased!) in the foothills of the Pennines and roughly half way between
Leeds and Manchester and easily accessible (<1 hour by train) from
both. It will also be a two day event and will take place over a
weekend, with provisional dates of 15th & 16th September.
I've uploaded a few photos of the venue to Flickr (more/better ones to
be uploaded in due course):
http://www.flickr.com/photos/carrierdetect/7234510996/in/set-72157629815372…
The venue also has a hostel on the site and I'll see if any sort of
group booking deal can be arranged.
http://www.hebdenbridgehostel.co.uk/
Of course there also hotels and guests houses, or should you wish you
could even hire a canal boat.
http://www.bronteboathire.co.uk/
Although this might be a bit of a waste if you're only returning to
sleep on it...
I think the plan will be to host talks on the Saturday, with hands-on
sessions on the Sunday. But obviously I'm keen to hear any suggestions
that people might have as to the structure, as well as themes and talk
topics. And as always, offers to present or run a workshop are most
welcome. Discuss here or e-mail me direct — whichever suits. I'll
provide updates to this list as and when plans develop.
Best,
Andrew
Hello,
Registration for OSHUG #19 is now open, details below.
Best,
Andrew
//
OSHUG #19 — Kits (Homesense, Quick2Wire)
31st May 2012, 18:00 - 20:00 at Centre for Creative Collaboration, 16
Acton Street, London, WC1X 9NG, [map] (51.529049, -0.116436)
Sponsored by DesignSpark: http://www.designspark.com/
— Registration: http://oshug.org/event/19
For those that are new to hardware development it can prove a daunting
prospect, and kits that address the needs of those with little or no
experience in this area have a vital role to play. At the nineteenth
OSHUG meeting we will be hearing about two such kits, one that was
designed to support user-led smart home innovation and that was based
around the Arduino platform, and an experimenters kit for the
Raspberry Pi that is currently in development.
- The Homesense Project
The Homesense project was a European user-led, smart-home development
project employing open source hardware. The project was led by Tinker
London and EDF and engaged households supported by local experts in
the design and development of smart home concepts.
The project was developed as a reaction to top-down design approaches
commonly observed in technological development and home building. Most
early research viewed smart homes as a single complex system that is
designed and constructed from the ground up, and assumes that most
aspects (physical building, digital infrastructure, furniture,
appliances) are under the control of a single smart-home developer.
(Kortuem et al. 2010)
In the contrasting reality however of multi-vendor development and
retrofitting this is rarely the case. Inspired also by an argument
that smart homes are developed by experts in a top down approach
subsequently living with a smart home is acknowledged to be
problematic to non-experts who lack control over respective
technologies.
The Homesense project was therefore designed to enable user-led
innovation within the home environment, building alongside existing
environmental and social conditions allowing end-users to address
their own concerns in their physical and ‘lived in’ space. Homesense
sought to bring the open collaboration methods of online communities
to physical infrastructures in the home. Designing a toolkit to
support this approach is explored as a topic of this presentation.
Natasha Carolan is a PhD student at HighWire Doctoral Training Centre,
Lancaster University where her research considers commodification of
design and production processes in the digital economy. A product
designer by background, her research explores open and user
innovation, service design and value co-creation in areas of NPD and
manufacturing. Natasha co-designed the Homesense toolkit by situating
the toolkit as a cultural probe a strategy that Natasha believes is
important in placing open source hardware in a democratic system as a
tool for learning and empowerment.
- Quick2Wire
Quick2Wire Limited is a start-up that is developing a range of OSH/OSS
add-on products for the Raspberry Pi. The first product is an
experimenter's kit, contaning an expansion board, a set of components
with which to experiment, software to drive the Pi, and an instruction
manual. This will be followed by a series of expansion kits, using I2C
and SPI to add capabilities like ADC, DAC, PWM and stepper motor
drivers.
All the hardware and software will be released under open source licences.
The presentation will conclude with a demonstration using hardware
prototypes driven by a Raspberry Pi.
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/19
Hi there,
i am new to this group (and based in Munich, Germany not London) but
nevertheless a friend of mine
is organizing an event in London that you might find interesting:
http://www.musictechfest.org/#register
A three day, free Music Hack Day/TechFest.
Be fast, there might still be some tickets left
Kind Regards
Nils
--
Nils Hitze
Email: nhitze(a)gmail.com
Mobil: +49 179 9429701
Blog: silberkind.de <http://www.silberkind.de>
G+: silberkind.de/+
Twitter: @kojote <http://twitter.com/kojote>
I have created a stub Wikipedia entry for OSHUG
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OSHUG
Perhaps others would like to expand this. More information on the
origins, and a list of meetings would be useful.
Best wishes,
Jeremy
--
Tel: +44 (1590) 610184
Cell: +44 (7970) 676050
SkypeID: jeremybennett
Email: jeremy.bennett(a)embecosm.com
Web: www.embecosm.com
It seems big business will try anything to stop government's supporting
open source. This government announcement is of interest - not least
because of them doing the right thing about it!
http://digital.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/2012/04/26/open-standards-consultation-…
Although we are an open source hardware group, many members overlap into
the open source software world. You may like to respond to the
consultation and your MP.
Best wishes,
Jeremy
--
Tel: +44 (1590) 610184
Cell: +44 (7970) 676050
SkypeID: jeremybennett
Email: jeremy.bennett(a)embecosm.com
Web: www.embecosm.com