Showing posts with label Galileo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Galileo. Show all posts

Saturday, July 12, 2014

Intel Galileo lab video playlist



Video include:

  1. Galileo as an Arduino compatible board
  2. Galileo as a linux server
  3. access GPIO from linux
  4. LedSensor in Arduino sketch
  5. LedSensor in shell
  6. LedSensor in C
  7. NodeJS
  8. Servo Motors


Monday, October 7, 2013

Intel Galileo Board Hardware Overview

Intel® Galileo Board Hardware Overview
This how-to video provides a hardware overview of the Intel® Galileo Board. This video shows the physical location of the various hardware components on the board and describes each one.

Download Intel Galileo Board Getting Started Guide

The document, Intel Galileo Board Getting Started Guide, explains how to connect your Intel® Galileo board to a computer, install the software on your computer, and upload your first sketch. This includes details such as downloading the environment, installing the Arduino* IDE application, updating the firmware, etc.

Intel Galileo Board Getting Started Guide
Intel Galileo Board Getting Started Guide

Download for free: Intel Galileo Board Getting Started Guide, in PDF format.

Arduino Intel Galileo Board

Arduino introduce the new Galileo Board from Intel. It's part of the Arduino Certified product line. You can find the official product page here.

Arduino Intel Galileo Board
Arduino Intel Galileo Board
Galileo is a microcontroller board based on the Intel® Quark SoC X1000 Application Processor, a 32-bit Intel Pentium-class system on a chip. It’s the first board based on Intel® architecture designed to be hardware and software pin-compatible with Arduino shields designed for the Uno R3. Digital pins 0 to 13 (and the adjacent AREF and GND pins), Analog inputs 0 to 5, the power header, ICSP header, and the UART port pins (0 and 1), are all in the same locations as on the Arduino Uno R3. This is also known as the Arduino 1.0 pinout.

Galileo is designed to support shields that operate at either 3.3V or 5V. The core operating voltage of Galileo is 3.3V. However, a jumper on the board enables voltage translation to 5V at the I/O pins. This provides support for 5V Uno shields and is the default behavior. By switching the jumper position, the voltage translation can be disabled to provide 3.3V operation at the I/O pins.

Of course, the Galileo board is also software compatible with the Arduino Software Development Environment (IDE), which makes usability and introduction a snap. In addition to Arduino hardware and software compatibility, the Galileo board has several PC industry standard I/O ports and features to expand native usage and capabilities beyond the Arduino shield ecosystem. A full sized mini-PCI Express slot, 100Mb Ethernet port, Micro-SD slot, RS-232 serial port, USB Host port, USB Client port, and 8MByte NOR flash come standard on the board.

Friday, October 4, 2013

Light You Can Touch | LYT by Second Story - demo mobile phones + Intel Galileo microprocessor board



With exciting implications for glowing furniture of the future, interactive studio Second Story has created a collaborative drawing canvas that allows users to control ambient lighting using their mobile phones via the new Intel® Galileo microprocessor board.

Learn more: Introducing the Galileo Development Board

See more of the LYT project here: http://thecreatorsproject.vice.com/blog/processor-galileo-helps-creators-innovate-in-unchartered-waters