Hi All,
There are no hardware talks this month, but there will be an excellent
series of 3 talks hosted by the BCS OSSG next Thursday, on theme of
personal online privacy.
Details below.
Best,
Andrew
//
Personal Privacy Online (The Dark Web, Investigatory Powers Act)
On the 19 January 2017, 18:00 - 20:00 at BCS London, 1st Floor, The
Davidson Building, 5 Southampton Street, London, WC2E 7HA.
Registration: https://events.bcs.org/book/2408/
We explore the theme of personal rights and privacy on the modern
Internet, with a talk on The Dark Web, covering insights on one of the
larger anonymous marketplaces online and another on the new
Investigatory Powers Act.
— The Investigatory Powers Act: What is it?
The Investigatory Powers Act also known as the Snoopers Charter is now
law, find out what that means for you and your company. The Snoopers
Charter would require metadata on every email, website visit and social
media log to be recorded. It covers hacking and mass hacking performed
by Government agencies. Its powers can be enforced across the world. It
contains over 270 clauses and dwarfs the computer misuse act in terms of
size, so this is going to be a speed run covering some of the high points.
* Glyn Wintle is a security evangelist and software engineer. He has
given evidence in Parliament, frequently gives technical talks about
security and is well know for his work with the Open Rights Group.
— The Dark Web
Within the last years, governmental bodies have been futilely trying to
fight against dark web hosted marketplaces. Shortly after the closing of
“The Silk Road” by the FBI and Europol in 2013, new successors have been
established. Through the combination of cryptocurrencies and nonstandard
communication protocols and tools, agents can anonymously trade in a
marketplace for illegal items without leaving any record.
This talk will presents a research carried out to gain insights on the
products and services sold within one of the larger marketplaces for
drugs, fake ids and weapons on the Internet, Agora, and on new
developments after the demise of Agora.
The team behind the research included Andres Baravalle, Sin Wee Lee,
Germans Zaharovs (research intern) and Mauro Lopez Sanchez (final year
project).
The work has been featured on the front page on The Times and on the
Guardian, amongst other media.
* Andres Baravalle works in the in the University of East London as
Senior Lecturer in Computing.
He has been working in academia since 2004 (University of Turin,
University of Sheffield, Open University, University of East London),
while also working as a contractor in industry.
Andres has been developing in LAMP environments since 1999 and managing
development teams since shortly after.
In the past years he has been combining his expertise in web
technologies with an interest on security and data science. “
He once made a student cry - by praising his work.
Note: Please aim to arrive by 18:15 as the event will start at 18:30 prompt.
--
Andrew Back
http://abopen.com
Hello,
Following the last meeting — and probably in the pub ... — I seem to
recall a theme and/or talks being suggested for the meeting on the
evening of Thursday 16th February. Does this sound familiar to anyone?
Failing which, new suggestions welcome :o)
Cheers,
Andrew
--
Andrew Back
http://abopen.com
Happy new year all
This call for makers might interest some OSHUG members:
It a residency programme for UK makers to go to Shenzhen (arguably the
electronics manufacturing capital of the world). All info here:
http://creativeconomy.britishcouncil.org/blog/16/12/16
/calling-all-uk-makers-opportunity-travel-shenzhen/
One of the residency is with Makeblock to prototype a kit with their team.
I have visited their office in Shenzhen, it's pretty much a mini-Legoland
for hardware makers. Other residencies are around maker education,
sustainability, 3D Printing etc.
And generally this city is worth a trip to source components or discover
how the Shanzhai
<http://www.vam.ac.uk/shekou/from-shenzhen-shanzhai-and-the-maker-movement/>
ecosystem works, that said don't go there if you can't stand air pollution!
cheers
--
Marc
@marc_in_london <https://twitter.com/marc_in_london>
Hello,
Excited to announce that in a little over a month we will be jointly
hosting with BCS OSSG, a 1-day workshop that will serve as an
introduction to FPGAs and Verilog, via the most excellent project
IceStorm/Yosys/Arachne-pnr open source toolchain and myStorm iCE40
FPGA board.
You can find details below and note that at the time of writing there
is a mistake on the BCS event page and the timing is 09:00-17:00, as
on the OSHUG page.
Place are limited, FPGA workshops have proven highly popular in the
past and so if you would like to take part, I'd suggest registering
sooner rather than later. However, please only register if you are
confident that you can make it, as the workshop will likely sell out
fairly quickly and we'd prefer to avoid having a waiting list and then
empty seats on the day.
Note that the venue for this is the RSA and not the BCS.
There will also be a regular meeting in the evening, but at a
different venue and further details will be provided in due course.
Cheers,
Andrew
//
On the 1 December 2016, 09:00 - 17:00 at Prince Philip Room, The Royal
Society of Arts, 8 John Adam Street, London, WC2N 6EZ.
Registration: http://oshug.org/event/53
A full day, hands-on FPGA programming workshop that is free to attend.
The regular monthly meeting will then follow in the evening, but at a
different venue and for details see the OSHUG No. 54 event page (to be
added soon!).
Please note that if you intend to attend both the workshop and evening
meeting, you must register separately for each of these!
— Workshop details
In this workshop we will build some basic Verilog blocks and modules
targeting low power, low cost FPGAs from the Lattice iCE40 series. The
workshop will operate using a complete open source Verilog toolchain
based around Yosys and Arachne-PNR, which can be run on Linux and OS
X. We will cover basic sequential and combinational logic blocks. In
addition we will show you how you can combine simple ARM
microcontroller code running alongside and communicating with Verilog
peripherals synthesised on a Lattice iCE40 FPGA, all running together
on myStorm.
This workshop will give participants a real taste of FPGA development
in an open source software environment, using open source hardware.
* Ken Boak started his professional career at BBC Research Department
in 1986 working on digital signal processing systems for HDTV and
subsequently over 30 years, a mix of 10 other technology companies,
both UK and US based, in the fields of instrumentation, automation,
telemetry telecomms.
Ken has been interested in energy monitoring since the early 1990s,
when he constructed a 4 seater electric car, and provided rudimentary
energy analysis of the battery charge and discharge cycles. In 1998 he
joined a South London company and designed a low power wireless,
monitor device for automatic, remote gas and electricity meter
reading.
In 2009 Ken worked on the Onzo Energy Monitoring Kit, a commercial
device that was ultimately distributed to Southern Electric customers.
Then in 2010 he produced a series of educational devices to teach
engineering undergraduates the principles of photovoltaic energy
systems.
Ken has continued his interests in energy monitoring, working
collaboratively with Megni on the OpenEnergyMonitor project, the open
Inverter Project and also for All Power Labs in Berkeley, California,
where he was involved in power monitoring of wood gasifier generator
sets. He tries to live a low impact lifestyle in a modest Edwardian
house in Surrey, with a little help from modern electronics.
* Alan Wood has been working with parallel distributed programming for
several decades. His recent work includes smart grids, 3D printers,
robotics, automation and biotec diagnostics. His current research is
focused on machine learning for embedded applications using Motes on
FPGA and emerging Asics. He is a long term advocate and moderator (aka
Folknology) for xCORE and other opensource communities, as well as a
founder of Surrey and Hampshire Makerspace.
— What to bring
Participants must bring a laptop computer and ideally one that is
running either Linux or OS X. If your laptop is running Windows, you
should also bring along a Raspberry Pi or similar Linux SBC, that you
can use to build the toolchain and program myStorm over USB.
Note: Please aim to arrive by 08:45 as the workshop will start at 09:00 prompt.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
Hot on the heels OnChip and Open-V of comes
https://www.crowdsupply.com/sifive/hifive1
I note they have already met their target on the first day (it wasn't
a very hard target).
Jeremy
- --
Tel: +44 (1590) 610184
Cell: +44 (7970) 676050
SkypeID: jeremybennett
Twitter: @jeremypbennett
Email: jeremy.bennett(a)embecosm.com
Web: www.embecosm.com
PGP key: 1024D/BEF58172FB4754E1 2009-03-20
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Version: GnuPG v2
iEYEARECAAYFAlg9qmQACgkQvvWBcvtHVOFH5QCfYP3W6aBQOYoHVH70YLhqiAhG
q4kAn3JesS6OfLDaHMg30DJuU6+xR34e
=yaiL
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I'm trying to reach a conclusion regarding one system of measurements we
can use for modular designs that will work everywhere.
https://www.atthatmatt.com/research/grand-unification-
theory-of-modular-units/
What I've got so far is that the Open Structures 40mm grid is the way to go
because most of the world uses metric and the most commonly available
imperial parts can be shimmed to fit.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Javier Serrano <Javier.Serrano(a)cern.ch>
Date: 14 October 2016 at 16:14
Subject: Call for Participation in FOSDEM 2017 EDA devroom
To: eda-devroom(a)lists.fosdem.org
Dear all,
I just published the call for participation:
http://www.ohwr.org/projects/ohr-meta/wiki/FOSDEM2017
As you can see, it's basically copy/paste from last year's, with the
addition of the possibility of having tutorials. Please help spread the
word around you, and of course feel free to submit suggestions here
regarding the devroom itself.
Thanks,
Javier
_______________________________________________
eda-devroom mailing list
eda-devroom(a)lists.fosdem.org
https://lists.fosdem.org/listinfo/eda-devroom
Hello,
The fully open source RISC-V based 32-bit microcontroller, Open-V, is
now crowdfunding on Crowd Supply:
https://www.crowdsupply.com/onchip/open-v
Best,
Andrew
Please feel free to forward this to those that would welcome it.
* Event: Manchester Free Software's November Meeting
* Talk: Talos Secure Workstation
* Speaker: Michael Dorrington
* Campaigning: MFS CETA letter
* Date: Tuesday, 15th November 2016 (3rd Tuesday of the month)
* Start time: 19:00
* Finish time: 20:30 (and then on for social)
* Location: Madlab. (Manchester Digital Laboratory).
- http://madlab.org.uk/
* Address: 36-40 Edge Street, Manchester. M4 1HN.
- Opposite "Common" on Edge Street, Northern Quarter.
- http://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=19/53.48413/-2.23639
== Details ==
The purpose of Manchester Free Software is to promote the Free Software
philosophy.
Every meeting we start with an opportunity for informal key signing.
For an explanation of what this is about see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_signing_party
The meeting schedule is:
19:00-19:45 Talk: "Talos Secure Workstation"
19:45-20:30 Campaigning: "MFS CETA letter"
=== Talk ===
There are now several free hardware computer designs, many having used
Crowd Supply to seek backers to get all the way to being manufactured.
The Talos Secure Workstation is now on Crowd Supply hoping to become a
tangible reality.
What differentiates Talos from other free hardware is that it's very
powerful. Most free hardware is low power consuming but also has lower
computing power, however Talos competes with high end workstation/server
non-free hardware. Another differentiation is that Talos uses a Power
Architecture, an alternative to x86 and ARM.
Talos has some in particularly interesting features:
* Power Architecture using POWER8
* No Intel Management Engine or similar
* Hardware virtualisation support including IO
* Promised "open-toolchain FPGAs"
* Lots of PCIe slots
* Other I/O capability including GPIO pins
In the talk we will discuss the Talos specification, history, Crowd
Supply and future. Discussion will be had on possible shared purchase.
More information:
*
https://www.crowdsupply.com/raptor-computing-systems/talos-secure-workstati…
* https://www.crowdsupply.com/raptor-computing-systems/power8-cpus
* https://www.crowdsupply.com/about
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Architecture
If you have experience of free hardware, Power Architecture or similar
then please consider giving a lightning talk at the meeting.
=== Campaigning ===
The "Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement" (CETA), an agreement
between the EU and Canada, was signed on 30th October. This agreement
has anti-free software measures which Manchester Free Software oppose.
This campaigning section of the meeting aims to get a good start on a
letter detailing these measures, the negative effect they'll have on
free software, why people should value software freedom and the work
that Manchester Free Software does.
More information:
*
https://www.fsf.org/blogs/licensing/the-many-headed-monster-of-internationa…
* https://www.fsf.org/campaigns/trading-freedom
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CETA
== After-meeting ==
The meeting will be followed by informal discussion and socialising in
the Terrace (which is next door to Madlab). There are soft drinks
available and there is no pressure to consume alcohol.
== Location ==
The meeting will take place at the usual venue of Madlab, details above.
== Transport ==
=== Parking ===
Around the venue there are parking meter bays that become zero cost
after 8pm on Tuesday so you will have to pay up until then and the
maximum stay is 2 hours BUT MAKE SURE YOU VERIFY ALL THIS on parking.
There are paid parking lots around the venue, they are marked by a blue
P in this OpenStreetMap centred on Madlab
<http://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=15/53.4843/-2.2365>. Most of those
parking lots are owned by NCP <http://www.ncp.co.uk/>.
If you can’t decide otherwise then park in Manchester Arndale
<http://www.manchesterarndale.com/directions.aspx>.
=== Public Transport ===
Manchester Victoria (MCV) train station, Shudehill tram and bus station,
and Manchester Piccadilly bus station are all fairly close to Madlab,
see OpenStreetMap centred on Madlab
<http://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=15/53.4843/-2.2365>.
Manchester Piccadilly (MAN) train station and Manchester Central Coach
Station are not too far away either.
== More Information ==
Information about Manchester Free Software can be found on the
Manchester Free Software pages on LibrePlanet
<https://libreplanet.org/wiki/Manchester>.
Regards,
Mike.
MFS Chair.
--
FSF member #9429
http://www.fsf.org/register_form?referrer=9429http://www.fsf.org/about
"The Free Software Foundation (FSF) is a nonprofit with a worldwide
mission to promote computer user freedom and to defend the rights of all
free software users."
BOOM! Excellent news. looking forward to this.
See you there.
Also now that I got you here I was wondering if anyone can have a look at
my https://forum.mystorm.uk/ account it's maco1717 i created it with a typo
on the email address never got the activation link
Thanks.
On Fri, Nov 4, 2016 at 12:00 PM, <oshug-request(a)oshug.org> wrote:
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> Today's Topics:
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> 1. event#53 (Mark.itto)
> 2. Re: event#53 (Alan Wood)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Thu, 3 Nov 2016 16:21:14 +0000
> From: "Mark.itto" <maco1717(a)gmail.com>
> To: oshug(a)oshug.org
> Subject: [oshug] event#53
> Message-ID:
> <CADB-D=Nr5OYNNpukHy49+uqr1O-GVwoV=oXYcivZMofpf3ij0w@mail.
> gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
> Hi,
>
> I was wondering I we going to be using the mystorm boards?
>
> Are they available to purchase yet? if so where can I find them I would
> like to bring my own to take it home. also if there anything to go with it
> required or recomended?
>
> Looking forward to this.
>
> Kind regards and thanks.
> Marco.
>