This list may well be interested in this free presentation by Yara Senger
at Skills Matter in London in a couple of weeks.
http://skillsmatter.com/podcast/java-jee/jhome
EVENT DETAILS
What:London Java Community:jHome: Using JavaEE and open-source hardware to
automatize your houseWhere:The Skills Matter eXchange,
London<http://skillsmatter.com/location-details/java-jee/1268/96>
When:21 Feb 2012 Starts at 18:30
jHome: Using JavaEE and open-source hardware to automatize your house
During this presentation we will be showing how you can use Java EE and
open-source hardware, like Arduino, to automatize your house. Using jHome,
a complete Java EE 6 API for home automation, you can control lamps, wall
sockets, electric gates and doors using Web App and Twitter.
We will not present a product! It's a complete solution that you can do it
yourself with open-source hardware and software and you will have a lot of
fun with Java EE 6 with this different usage context!
This talk will cover:
- Introduction to Home Automation and open-source hardware
- Project jHome
Cool demos:
- Servlets controlling lamps
- Controllling RGB with jQuery
- Scheduling coffee-machine with EJB's
- Using sounds and FFT(fast fourier transforming) to control your house
This is a basic talk and useful for any developer professional level.
I'm not sure about "automatizing" anything, and no doubt this will all be
very basic for some here, but of interest I hope.
Hello,
Registration is now open for the February meeting and details are
below. Also, there is room for a third speaker if anyone would like to
propose a manufacturing related talk. Wouldn't need to be too long,
and could be on any topic, experiences or challenges etc to do with
the manufacturing of open source hardware. If interested drop me a
line asap.
Regards,
Andrew
--
OSHUG #16 — Manufacturing (Breadboard to Finished Product, Arduino Shield)
On the 23rd February 2012, 18:00 - 20:00 at Centre for Creative
Collaboration, 16 Acton Street, London, WC1X 9NG (51.529049,
-0.116436)
Registration: http://oshug.org/event/16
At the sixteenth OSHUG meeting we will be hearing about first-hand
experiences of taking an open source hardware design from being a
project to a product. With insights into prototyping, some of the
manufacturing options available and the challenges that may be
encountered.
— From Breadboard to Finished Product
You have a cool project, people are sending you emails asking where
they could get their hands on one and you find yourself googling
"electronics manufacturing"... Should you get yourself a toaster oven
and start a miniature production line in your living room or should
you just outsource it? What challenges await you if you decide to go
down the contract manufacturing route? This talk aims to give the
audience an overview of the electronics manufacturing process, using a
project recently completed by the speaker as a case study.
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.
— Arduino Shield: From Design to Manufacturing
The Arduino CAN-Bus shield gives the Arduino CAN-Bus capability. In
this presentation we will learn about the design process from PCB
layout and prototyping, to testing with a simulator and eventually
testing with a real car. And about the perils of using a simulator,
small scale production and outsourcing.
Sukkin Pang is a design engineer and a director at SK Pang Electronics
Ltd. He graduated from the University of Hertfordshire and has over 20
years of industrial experience. He is passionate about open source
hardware and has four Arduino shields published. He used to tinker in
assembler on the Z80, 6502, PIC and AVR, but nowadays he mainly uses C
and C++.
Note: Please aim to arrive for 18:00 - 18:20 as the talks will start
at 18:30 prompt.
Registration: http://oshug.org/event/16
Hi guys,
Thought you might be interested in an event we are organising.
Barcamp Canterbury[0] is an un-conference all about technology.
Barcamps[1] are run all around the country for and buy technology enthusiasts,
and what's better they are totally free!
The event is going to run on weekend of the 28th and 29th of April.
thank
Martin
[0]http://www.barcampcanterbury.com/
[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BarCamp
Hello,
Registration is now open for January's meeting.
Regards,
Andrew
--
Event #15 — Wireless (Hacking Commodity Wireless, Practical Wireless,
Contiki OS, CWIG)
On the 26th January 2012, 18:00 - 20:00 at Centre for Creative
Collaboration, 16 Acton Street, London, WC1X 9NG, (51.529049,
-0.116436)
** Registration: http://oshug.org/event/15 **
At the fifteenth OSHUG meeting we'll be taking a look at wireless
technologies. We will hear how you can repurpose low cost commodity
equipment, we will be given an introduction to RF basics, we will
learn about the Contiki operating system, and we will be introduced to
Ciseco's new Wireless Internet Gateway.
- Hacking Commodity Wireless
Many people build their hacks from the ground up, but those short of
time sometimes prefer to repurpose cheap off-the-shelf components that
can be made to fit the bill. A good example being a wireless
thermometer for external use, where an off-the-shelf device provides
an inexpensive option complete with the requisite weatherproof
packaging. However, such devices typically use proprietary protocols
and good documentation is rarely available. This talk will look at how
to interface such devices where a degree of reverse-engineering is
frequently required.
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.
- Practical Wireless
Adding wireless connectivity to your latest open hardware project is
not difficult, provided that you take the time to understand some of
the principles of RF communication. In this talk we will learn about
the basics of wireless propagation, and take a look at some of the low
cost modules which now make adding wireless even easier.
Ken Boak joined BBC Research Department after graduating and worked on
digital picture processing of HDTV images, and coding algorithms for
video distribution around studios. Since then, Ken has worked in
laboratory instrumentation, telecommunications, low power wireless and
consumer electronics produced in the Far East. With an interest in
renewables, Ken now develops laboratory instruments to teach
undergraduates the principles of photovoltaic and wind power. Outside
of work, Ken is interested in smart wireless sensors, open source
hardware and low cost solutions for the Internet of Things.
- An Introduction to the Contiki O/S
This talk is aimed to introduce the Contiki OS and some of the
development hardware. 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.
- CWIG — The Ciseco Wireless Internet Gateway
The CWIG is a new open hardware device that is designed to be the "one
and only" platform you'd need for a wireless gateway. It employs the
same ATmega328 microcontroller that is familiar to Arduino users and
supports Ciseco's TI CC1110-based XRF module, XBee, Bluetooth, RFM12B,
X10/HomeEasy, FRAM, SD, Ethernet and over-the-air programming with
AVRDude. It's sized to be housed in a low cost, compact enclosure and
to be cheap to build using through-hole components. In this talk we
will be given an introduction to the CWIG and also to the XRF wireless
UART and programmable RF module.
Miles Hodkinson's twenty-odd year relationship with IT ended around
six years ago when he decided that it was time to do something
completely different. He had looked around without success for
something to log and control his wind turbine, solar panels and Lister
single cylinder engine, and found that nothing was flexible enough for
the money he wanted to pay (tens of pounds per device), so he decided
he would try and build it himself. After a number of years working on
a human-focused method of networking originally built using XBee
modules and now termed LLAP, his company developed the TI CC1110-based
XRF module.
Note: Please aim to arrive for 18:00 - 18:20 as the talks will start
at 18:30 prompt.
** Registration: http://oshug.org/event/15 **
Hello,
Just in case anyone hadn't spotted this, XMOS are running a promotion
where you can pick up an XC-1A dev kit for free:
http://blog.solderpad.com/post/14114783567/free-xmos-xc-1a-development-kits
For the sake of clarity: SolderPad blog link as we were asked to help
promote this, and I couldn't see a link to the form on either xmos.com
or xcore.com.
Cheers,
Andrew
This e-petition to HMG asks to have programming taught in schools
It is only tangentially related to the interests of OSHUG. However in
general if you learn programming it will bring you into a range of tools
and application that are open source. The understanding it brings also
helps awareness of open source. And of course one of the best ways of
learning real programming is with Arduino.
https://submissions.epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/15081
If it reaches 100,000 signatures, then it may be considered by
parliament. Given the number of programmers in the UK that should be
achievable.
I believe that any member of the public can sign e-petitions, not just
adult voters. In particular if you have children who care about this
issue (mine do), then they can sign as well.
Jeremy
--
Tel: +44 (1590) 610184
Cell: +44 (7970) 676050
SkypeID: jeremybennett
Email: jeremy.bennett(a)embecosm.com
Web: www.embecosm.com
Forwarded from the Oxford Geeks mailing list ..
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jason Field <jason(a)jasonfield.com>
Date: Thu, Nov 10, 2011 at 3:18 PM
Subject: [oxfordgeeks] Hacker Day @ Oxford Instruments - 3rd December
To: list(a)oxfordhackspace.org.uk, oxfordgeeks(a)googlegroups.com
Hi all,
My quest to open up Oxford Instrument's doors to the local hacking
community has succeeded, and we're planning to hold an event on the
3rd of December for all who are interested!
The theme for the first event will be 3D printing since it brings
together a lot of different aspects of the open source hardware
movement, but we'll be happy to welcome anyone who has a project
they'd like to work on. On site we have;
* Scopes/DVMs
* Professional soldering stations
* General tools
* Miscellaneous electronic bits 'n bobs (SMD resistors & caps, wire etc.)
* Space
* Refreshments & lunch
* First-class bodging skills
See the attached flyer for address details. If you're interested in
coming along then please let me know (either email or @iamjasonfield)
so we have a rough idea of numbers.
Thanks,
Jason
PS. Apologies for the cross-posting, and date conflict with the
excellent-looking Random Hacks of Kindness. Maybe we can look at some
random hardware hacks of kindness at OI?
--
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To post to this group, send email to oxfordgeeks(a)googlegroups.com.
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--
Paul (psd)
http://blog.whatfettle.com
Hello,
Details are now online and registration is open for the November meeting.
Cheers,
Andrew
---
OSHUG #14 — Open for Change Pt.2 (Hexayurt, O + S Project, Onawi)
24th November 2011, 18:00 - 20:00 at Centre for Creative
Collaboration, 16 Acton Street, London, WC1X 9NG (51.529049,
-0.116436)
Registration: http://oshug.org/event/14
Back in May at OSHUG #10 we heard about three projects concerned with
effecting positive change. At the thirteenth meeting we'll be
continuing with this theme, and hearing about the Hexayurt disaster
relief shelter, documenting Appropriate Technology for the needs of
others, and open renewables.
- Free and Open Source Housing
The Hexayurt is an award-winning replacement for the disaster relief
tent which provides shelter at 20% the cost of a tent. It is designed
to be manufactured anywhere in the world at any scale, from local
materials, as Free hardware, to house humans in need. The Hexayurt
Project maintains the designs and makes them freely available. An
estimated $250,000 worth of Hexayurts were built at Burning Man this
year.
Vinay Gupta is one the world’s leading thinkers on infrastructure
theory, state failure solutions, and managing global system risks
including poverty/development and the environmental crisis. He works
at both the theoretical level, building models and mapping tools and
at the practical level, as the designer of the Hexayurt, he helped
start the US National Defense University STAR-TIDES program on
humanitarian assistance, consulted on urban resilience for Arup, and
is an associate fellow of the UCL Institute for Security and
Resilience Studies.
- The Needs of Others
One of the areas seeing heavy influence from the Free and Open Source
Software (F/OSS) movement is Appropriate Technology, and the O+S
Project is working from the perspective of its documentation. It is
investigating the difficulty in translating from F/OSS to Appropriate
Technology at both a practices and principles level, and how we must
go further to meet the goals with the world’s poorest people.
Al Razi Masri is a recent Manufacturing Engineering graduate and
founder of the O+S Project. In addition to which he is working on
documentation for the Hexayurt Project and instructional documents for
other Appropriate Technology.
- Open Hardware and Renewable Energy
Onawi is a non-profit organisation promoting open hardware for the
development of non-domestic wind energy systems. Open hardware is
becoming increasingly popular, as we can see in the recent initiative
by Facebook to open up the technology behind their data-centres.
However, most open hardware projects are targeted at hobbyists or
those looking for custom do-it-yourself alternatives to mass market
products. While this is a very positive aspect, at Onawi we believe
that open licensing and collaborative development could have a far
reaching impact on industrial production. In particular, Open Hardware
could provide the horizontal technology transfer of renewables
required to fight climate change in developing countries.
Javier Ruiz is a UK based digital activist and social entrepreneur
promoting open data, open standards and open licensing as the basis
for a better future based on transparency, participation and
collaboration. His practical work cuts across various spheres ranging
from citizen journalism, archives to renewable energy. His background
is in anthropology and technology management, and you can normally
find him at the Open Rights Group.
Note: Please aim to arrive for 18:00 - 18:20 as the talks will start
at 18:30 prompt.
Registration: http://oshug.org/event/14
Hello,
Registration is now open for the inaugural Open Source Hardware Camp
which will take place on Thursday 27th October. Further details should
be added to the event page in due course.
Cheers,
Andrew
--
Open Source Hardware Camp
27th October 2011, 09:30 - 18:00 at Centre for Creative Collaboration,
16 Acton Street, London, WC1X 9NG, (51.529049, -0.116436)
http://oshug.org/event/oshcamp
Join us at the inaugural Open Source Hardware Camp for a hands-on day
of three parallel workshops, with short plenary sessions in the
morning and afternoon.
- Practical 3D Printing
A hands-on session in which we will use OpenSCAD (an open-source,
code-based, 3D parametric CAD software system to design simple
3-dimensional objects), and other freely available tools, to turn the
resulting designs into files that can be used to drive a RepRap 3D
printer, or similar rapid prototyping device. Further details TBD.
Graham Klyne has been a software developer since the late 1970s,
during that time having been involved in projects and products ranging
from industrial process control, 3-D motion capture, network
infrastructure, home automation, semantic web technologies and
research data curation. He has also been involved in the development
of IETF and Web standards. More recently, he has been pursuing a
personal interest in 3D printing - which neatly complements his
earlier work in motion capture - and has constructed a RepRap machine
(which he hopes to use for making specialist parts for model aircraft)
and has been learning a little about 3-D parametric CAD.
As a member of the pif3D project, David Flanders helps coordinate the
parts, materials, tools and skill required for people to build their
own 3D printers. This is all done for free, so long as you promise to
help someone else build their own printer as well! David enjoys
hacking code in his spare time and working on designing new 3D models,
currently he is working on prototype 3D models for: a rollerblade
frame (for off road inline skating), a flowerpot that has a water
reservoir (so it doesn't dry out when you are on holiday or forget to
water it) and lighting fixtures (including translucent lamp shades,
candelabras and chandeliers). David's day job is working with
technology innovation projects in Universities throughout the UK.
- Building the Internet of Things with Nanode and Pachube
In this workshop we will be given an introduction to Nanode, the low
cost open source Arduino-like board that has built in web
connectivity, and Pachube, the web-based service "built to manage the
World's real-time data". Following which the workshop will split into
two groups and build a real world IoT application for the Centre for
Creative Collaboration. With one group focusing on Nanode development
and the other using Pachube to develop the online part of the
application.
Ken Boak joined BBC Research Department after graduating and worked on
digital picture processing of HDTV images, and coding algorithms for
video distribution around studios. Since then, Ken has worked in
laboratory instrumentation, telecommunications, low power wireless and
consumer electronics produced in the Far East. With an interest in
renewables, Ken now develops laboratory instruments to teach
undergraduates the principles of photovoltaic and wind power. Outside
of work, Ken is interested in smart wireless sensors, open source
hardware and low cost solutions for the Internet of Things.
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.
- Collaboration in Open Source Hardware
Whilst the development practices associated with open source software
are now reasonably mature and understood by many, the same cannot be
said of open source hardware and with it come specific challenges. For
example, in terms of collaboration across design tools, managing
contributions, licensing and project presentation. In this workshop we
will be given an introduction to Electronic Design Automation (EDA)
tools and the process of documenting a project, licensing and other
challenges, before looking at the current options available for
presentation and collaboration. Further details TBD.
Paul Downey is a doodler, a maker and a veteran communications
software developer. He has been hacking embedded systems since the
late 1970s. Formerly BT's Chief Web Services Architect, and lead W3C
representative, he was until recently a member of Osmosoft — a small
team building open source Web collaboration systems. Paul is
co-founder of SolderPad, a place to share, discover and collaborate on
electronic projects.
Andrew Back is an artist, electronics hacker and open source advocate.
He acted as BT's Open Source Strategist, establishing company-wide
open source policy and process and representing them at a number of
bodies including The Linux Foundation and ATIS. Andrew co-founded the
Electron Club in 2006 — one of the UK's first hackerspaces, and is
co-founder of SolderPad, a place to share, discover and collaborate on
electronic projects.
Note:
* Please aim to arrive for 09:30-09:45 as the event will start at 10:00 prompt.
* A light lunch and refreshments will be provided. Please ensure that
you make any dietary requirements clear when registering.
// With thanks to sponsor DesignSpark — http://www.designspark.com //