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Source-only End-of-life, no longer updated; historically important, because many analog simulators are based on this project Xyce [17] Sandia National Laboratories: 2023 Windows, macOS, Linux * * Backend simulator, supports parallel simulation on Linux and macOS, can solve huge circuits
Wiring is an open-source electronics prototyping platform composed of a programming language, an integrated development environment (IDE), and a single-board microcontroller. It was developed starting in 2003 by Hernando Barragán. Barragán started the project at the Interaction Design Institute Ivrea.
Freeduino – an open-source physical computing platform based on a simple I/O board and a development environment that implements the open source Processing / Wiring language. Also clones of this platform including Freeduino. Tinkerforge – a platform comprising stackable microcontrollers for interfacing with sensors and other I/O devices
The project successfully released over 6500 items and stories online, which can be freely downloaded and used for education and research. The project was funded by the Joint Information Systems Committee. In 2011, the team at the University of Oxford received further funding from Europeana to run a similar crowdsourcing initiative in Germany.
Engineering Projects in Community Service (EPICS) was founded in 1995 at Purdue University by Professors Edward Coyle and Leah Jamieson as a solution to two problems. [1] First, many engineering graduates lacked real world skills needed for project management, such as budgeting and scheduling.
Blue Brain Project, an attempt to create a synthetic brain by reverse-engineering the mammalian brain down to the molecular level. [1] Google Brain, a deep learning project part of Google X attempting to have intelligence similar or equal to human-level. [2] Human Brain Project, ten-year scientific research project, based on exascale ...
This is a comprehensive list of volunteer computing projects, which are a type of distributed computing where volunteers donate computing time to specific causes. The donated computing power comes from idle CPUs and GPUs in personal computers, video game consoles, [1] and Android devices.
The Byte Code Engineering Library (BCEL) is a project sponsored by the Apache Foundation previously under their Jakarta charter to provide a simple API for decomposing, modifying, and recomposing binary Java classes (I.e. bytecode). The project was conceived and developed by Markus Dahm prior to officially being donated to the Apache Jakarta ...