The Wikimedia Foundation's book rendering service has been withdrawn. Please upload your Wikipedia book to one of the external rendering services. |
You can still create and edit a book design using the
Book Creator and upload it to an external rendering service:
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| This
user book is a user-generated collection of Wikipedia articles that can be easily saved, rendered electronically, and ordered as a printed book. If you are the creator of this book and need help, see
Help:Books (general tips) and
WikiProject Wikipedia-Books (questions and assistance). Edit this book: Book Creator · Wikitext Order a printed copy from: PediaPress [ About ] [ Advanced ] [ FAQ ] [ Feedback ] [ Help ] [ WikiProject ] [ Recent Changes ] |
SoC-EmbeddedLinux-HW
by Paul J. Richardson, of InstructionResearch.com, a Non-Profit OpenEDU Org
System on a Chip (SoC) and Embedded Linux Hardware Technologies
Arduino, BeagleBoard, Raspberry Pi, and many other designs, brands, and boards come to mind when you hear about a new 'Makers' group, or Hackfest event for embedded linux. These are a separate area of technologies mostly clustered about hardware known as 'System on a Chip' (SoC), which is essentially most of a computer on a single chip. These are often used in robotics, digital signage, and home theatre PC's (HTPC), or even home automation. However, industrial automation such as manufacturing control systems are more likely to use a commercial grade of Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs), and academics are more likely to focus on 'Very Large Scale Integration' (VLSI) chips, when building massively parallel supercomputers or artificial neural networks for big data crunching or modeling of complex systems like the brain or weather. Revel then, that an entire industry belongs to you therefore, and build, make, hack till your heart is content! Some of these articles should help you become more familiar with these technologies.
The Wikimedia Foundation's book rendering service has been withdrawn. Please upload your Wikipedia book to one of the external rendering services. |
You can still create and edit a book design using the
Book Creator and upload it to an external rendering service:
|
| This
user book is a user-generated collection of Wikipedia articles that can be easily saved, rendered electronically, and ordered as a printed book. If you are the creator of this book and need help, see
Help:Books (general tips) and
WikiProject Wikipedia-Books (questions and assistance). Edit this book: Book Creator · Wikitext Order a printed copy from: PediaPress [ About ] [ Advanced ] [ FAQ ] [ Feedback ] [ Help ] [ WikiProject ] [ Recent Changes ] |
SoC-EmbeddedLinux-HW
by Paul J. Richardson, of InstructionResearch.com, a Non-Profit OpenEDU Org
System on a Chip (SoC) and Embedded Linux Hardware Technologies
Arduino, BeagleBoard, Raspberry Pi, and many other designs, brands, and boards come to mind when you hear about a new 'Makers' group, or Hackfest event for embedded linux. These are a separate area of technologies mostly clustered about hardware known as 'System on a Chip' (SoC), which is essentially most of a computer on a single chip. These are often used in robotics, digital signage, and home theatre PC's (HTPC), or even home automation. However, industrial automation such as manufacturing control systems are more likely to use a commercial grade of Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs), and academics are more likely to focus on 'Very Large Scale Integration' (VLSI) chips, when building massively parallel supercomputers or artificial neural networks for big data crunching or modeling of complex systems like the brain or weather. Revel then, that an entire industry belongs to you therefore, and build, make, hack till your heart is content! Some of these articles should help you become more familiar with these technologies.