Want to try a copy of Linux 2.6.29-rc5 in progess with Angstom and Opie? Opie probably isn t good for much but testing but it is kind of fun. This has a very slow boot, which is much improved since this NAND image was made.
NAND image of Linux 2.6.9-rc5 with Angstrom and Opie for test.
Download file.
Set to NOR and power on.
Install using the vivi command "Restore NAND Flash from HOST thru USB"
Turn off, set to NAND, turn on. Enjoy.
VideoMan is a very easy image acquisition library. It is able to manage many video inputs at the same time, such as WDM Firewire and USB cameras, PointGrey cameras and video files. It can also render the inputs using OpenGL. Suitable for computer vision
VideoMan is a very easy image acquisition library. It is able to manage many video inputs at the same time, such as WDM Firewire and USB cameras, PointGrey cameras and video files. It can also render the inputs using OpenGL. Suitable for computer vision
VideoMan is a very easy image acquisition library. It is able to manage many video inputs at the same time, such as WDM Firewire and USB cameras, PointGrey cameras and video files. It can also render the inputs using OpenGL. Suitable for computer vision
VideoMan is a very easy image acquisition library. It is able to manage many video inputs at the same time, such as WDM Firewire and USB cameras, PointGrey cameras and video files. It can also render the inputs using OpenGL. Suitable for computer vision
This is an example USB project showing how to interface an optical mouse sensor (the ADNS-2620) with a standard XP/Vista computer.
The TD-USB-01 board with a PIC18F2550 communicates with:
* the PC: USB 2.0 through a mini-B connector.
* the mouse sensor board: SPI over 4-wire flatcable.
The SL11RIDE is a low cost, high speed Universal Serial Bus RISC based Controller board. It contains a
16-bit RISC processor with built in SL11RIDE ROM to greatly reduce firmware development efforts. Its
serial flash EEPROM interface offers low cost storage for USB device configuration and customer product
specific functions. New functions can be programmed into the I2C by downloading it from a USB Host
PC. This unique architecture provides the ability to upgrade products, in the field, without changing the
peripheral hardware.
High volume USB 2.0 devices will be designed using ASIC technology with embedded USB 2.0 support.
For full-speed USB devices the operating frequency was low enough to allow data recovery to be handled
in a vendors VHDL code, with the ASIC vendor providing only a simple level translator to meet the USB
signaling requirements. Today s gate arrays operate comfortably between 30 and 60 MHz. With USB 2.0
signaling running at hundreds of MHz, the existing design methodology must change.
High volume USB 2.0 devices will be designed using ASIC technology with embedded USB 2.0 support.
For full-speed USB devices the operating frequency was low enough to allow data recovery to be handled
in a vendors VHDL code, with the ASIC vendor providing only a simple level translator to meet the USB
signaling requirements. Today s gate arrays operate comfortably between 30 and 60 MHz. With USB 2.0
signaling running at hundreds of MHz, the existing design methodology must change.