User Tools

Site Tools


chumby:hackerboard

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revision Previous revision
Next revision
Previous revision
chumby:hackerboard [2010/08/28 20:45]
ladyada
chumby:hackerboard [2016/01/28 18:05] (current)
Line 2: Line 2:
 ====== About! ====== ====== About! ======
  
-This page is a collection of mini-tutorials on doing stuff with the Chumby Hacker ​board! The CHB is a cool single board Linux computer that has much of the same hardware as the famous Chumby One. Its great for people who are experienced with Linux and want to have the power of a full computer ​with audio and video while at the same time getting all the peripherals of a microcontroller such as analog-to-digital conversion, PWM outputs, sensors, bit twiddling, and broken-out GPIOs!+This page is a collection of mini-tutorials on doing stuff with the Chumby Hacker ​Board (for brevity we will refer to it as the CHB)! The CHB is a cool single board Linux computer that has much of the same hardware as the famous ​[[http://​www.chumby.com/​|Chumby One]]It'​s ​great for people who are experienced with Linux and want to have the power of a microcomputer ​with audio and video output ​while at the same time getting all the peripherals of a microcontroller such as analog-to-digital conversion, PWM outputs, sensors, bit twiddling, and broken-out GPIOs!
  
-While we think that the CHB is a fairly easy-to-use SBC having a preinstalled ​OS and ready drivers for the peripherals,​ its not designed for beginners! The board is best used by those with Linux experience, and perhaps ​have had some poking around with microcontrollers such as BASIC Stamp, Arduino, AVR, PIC, 8051, etc+While we believe ​that the CHB is a fairly easy-to-use ​Single Board Computer (SBChaving a pre-installed ​OS on the included uSD card, and ready drivers for the peripherals,​ its not designed for beginners! The board is best used by those with previous ​Linux experience: the good news is you don'​t ​have to have another Linux computer to set up the CHB but you should have familiarity with shells and shell scripting, gcc, make, dmake, etc. We also suggest having ​had some poking around with microcontrollers such as BASIC Stamp, Arduino, AVR, PIC, 8051, etc. So that when we say "​i2c"​ and "not 5v tolerant I/Os" you can follow along
  
-**The CHB is not in any way officially supported by Chumby Industries! Chumby has generously offered a [[http://​forum.chumby.com/​viewforum.php?​id=20|Forum]] and [[http://​wiki.chumby.com/​mediawiki/​index.php/​Chumby_hacker_board|Wiki]] where they will try to share information but there is no hand-holding tech support. Please do not contact Chumby directly either by email or phone for help with your CHB. If you have questions, please post to their forums to receive help from others and the occasional assistance from a CHB developer.** ​+**The CHB is not in any way officially supported by [[http://​www.chumby.com/​|Chumby Industries]]! Chumby has generously offered a [[http://​forum.chumby.com/​viewforum.php?​id=20|Forum]] and [[http://​wiki.chumby.com/​mediawiki/​index.php/​Chumby_hacker_board|Wiki]] where they will try to share information but there is absolutely ​no hand-holding tech support ​or guarantee that the CHB will meet your project needs. Please do not contact Chumby directly either by email or phone for help with your CHB. If you have questions, please post to their forums to receive help from others and the occasional assistance from a CHB developer.** ​
  
 ====== Powering the Chumby Hacker Board ====== ====== Powering the Chumby Hacker Board ======
/home/ladyada/public_html/wiki/data/attic/chumby/hackerboard.1283028333.txt.gz · Last modified: 2016/01/28 18:05 (external edit)