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This is a list of open-source hardware projects, including computer systems and components, cameras, radio, telephony, science education, machines and tools, robotics, renewable energy, home automation, medical and biotech, automotive, prototyping, test equipment, and musical instruments.
NodeMCU started on 13 Oct 2014, when Hong committed the first file of nodemcu-firmware to GitHub. [13] Two months later, the project expanded to include an open-hardware platform when developer Huang R committed the gerber file of an ESP8266 board, named devkit v0.9. [ 14 ]
Node-RED has gained traction in the industrial internet of things (IIoT) and edge computing sectors. [8] [9] [10] Node-RED's open-source nature and large community have led to the creation of over 4000 connectors [11] supporting a wide range of data sources and protocols such as Modbus, OPC-UA, Siemens S7, and MQTT.
Because IoT projects have longer project timelines, a lack of skilled resources and several security/legal issues, there is a need for new and specifically designed project processes. The following management techniques should improve the success rate of IoT projects: [316] A separate research and development phase A Proof-of-Concept/Prototype ...
Smart emission [26] is an air quality monitoring project in the city of Nijmegen, NL. The project deployed multiple air quality sensors throughout the city. Data are published with open standards, including OGC SensorThings API. Part of the project is an open source ETL engine to load the project sensor data into an OGC SensorThings API. [27]
RIMO is the code name of the Shakti C-class based SoC that has been taped-out at Semi-Conductor Laboratory at Mohali using 180 nm process technology. The 144 sq.mm. chip has been tested to operate at a frequency of up to 70 MHz. The chip has been packaged on a 208-pin Ceramic Quad Flat Pack (CQFP). [6]
The Thing Description (TD) (or W3C WoT Thing Description (TD)) is a royalty-free, open information model with a JSON based representation format for the Internet of Things (IoT). A TD provides a unified way to describe the capabilities of an IoT device or service with its offered data model and functions, protocol usage, and further metadata.
[15] [16] Within the merging process, the project's license was changed to the Apache License 2.0. Source code was located in the AllJoyn project repositories until the end of 2017. [ 17 ] In 2018, development ended after the source and documentation were copied to GitHub.