Podcasts about VHDL

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Best podcasts about VHDL

Latest podcast episodes about VHDL

World of FPGA Podcast
WFP026 – FPGA Talk Intro

World of FPGA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2025 36:37


Episode 26 of the World of FPGA Podcast. About the hosts. Who are we, what do we do and our FPGA journey. Welcome to the FPGA Talk with the new co-host Glenn Kirilow

World of FPGA Podcast
WFP022 – VHDL Testbench

World of FPGA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2025 9:06


VHDL Testbenches have many interesting features to simulate and test your VHDL module. Let's have a look into these functions. Content of this Episode: * VHDL Testbenches * Using data files * Multiple modules * Automatic tests * More automation And for now come into our Newsletter and also follow us on LinkedIn. The post WFP022 – VHDL Testbench appeared first on World of FPGA by David Kirchner.

Security Architecture Podcast
LaunchPad Glimps Advanced Malware Detection

Security Architecture Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2024 29:46


The podcast features an insightful interview with Frederic from Gleams, a French startup specializing in advanced malware detection and investigation using artificial intelligence. Frederic discusses the company's role in protecting file flows, the differences between malware and viruses, common vectors of attack, challenges of static and dynamic detection, deployment options including air gap environments, and the company's focus on delivering effective threat detection and analysis. Frederic: https://www.linkedin.com/in/fr%C3%A9d%C3%A9ric-grelot-3243052a/ Frédéric Grelot began his career at CNES in Toulouse, spending three years in the Spacecraft's Embedded Computers department. There, he worked on designing a hardened computer chip for satellites and handled its validation from VHDL to integration in a satellite model and simulated space environment. In 2012, he joined the cyberdefense teams of the French Ministry of Armed Forces, specializing in reverse-engineering of computer systems and programs for seven years. In 2016-2017, Grelot initiated Artificial Intelligence work at DGA, identifying defense sectors where AI could be applied and helped establish a dedicated AI team. From 2017 to 2019, he led a team of 25 reverse-engineering analysts and continued enhancing his knowledge in Artificial Intelligence and Big Data. In 2019, Grelot co-founded GLIMPS, a company specializing in code analysis and malware detection using AI, and served as Scientist Lead. He contributed significantly to the company's outreach and communication. In 2023, he moved to Toronto, Canada, to open GLIMPS's first international office, engaging actively with the local tech and cybersecurity communities. Known for his distinctive profile, he also participated in various conferences and appeared on the national Radio Canada network. Grelot is committed to ecological sustainability, incorporating this perspective into his entrepreneurial endeavors. Glimps: GLIMPS is a cybersecurity company established in 2019 by four experts with a background in reverse-engineering. It offers innovative cybersecurity solutions leveraging a proprietary technology capable of automatically reading and understanding computer code. This technology is designed to enhance the detection and automation of binary analysis and threat identification, providing a significant boost to existing defense lines against increasingly sophisticated cyber threats. GLIMPS's solutions, which include GLIMPS Malware, are available in both SaaS and On-premise formats, catering to a broad spectrum of French and international companies and governmental bodies. The firm has achieved recognition within the cybersecurity community, evidenced by prices such as the European Cyber Week award, twice in a row. At the core of GLIMPS's offerings is its Deep Engine, a specialized AI engine based on Deep Learning. This engine excels in deep file analysis, enabling quick detection and characterization of advanced cyber threats. By conceptualizing code, GLIMPS's technology can identify all forms of malware, providing a comprehensive and scientifically validated approach to cybersecurity. This platform processes over one million files daily and serves more than a hundred customers, demonstrating its effectiveness and the trust it has garnered within the industry. GLIMPS also emphasizes collaboration within the French ecosystem, aiming to integrate its solutions where beneficial. The company's growth is underscored by its successful fundraising efforts, which include a €6 million round in 2021, and its continuous search for new talent to join its expanding team​.

World of FPGA Podcast
WFP007 – Programming languages for FPGAs

World of FPGA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2023 15:07


One big question is: How did the intelligence come into the FPGA? Therefore we discuss in today's episode two programming languages. Content of this Episode: * Programming languages * Verilog * VHDL * Graphic input * HLS = High Level Synthesis The World of FPGA is opening on the 14th of march. Follow us on LinkedIn to get all news and also come into our pre-opening newsletter. The post WFP007 – Programming languages for FPGAs appeared first on World of FPGA by David Kirchner.

ClojureScript Podcast
E81 Concurrency and parallelism with Paul Butcher

ClojureScript Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 44:17


Paul on Twitter — https://twitter.com/paulrabutcher Paul on Github — https://github.com/paulbutcher Paul's website - https://tententhsconsulting.com Seven concurrency models in seven weeks - https://pragprog.com/titles/pb7con/seven-concurrency-models-in-seven-weeks/ Akka - https://akka.io/ Elixir - https://elixir-lang.org/ Erlang - https://www.erlang.org/ VHDL - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VHDL Support the podcast:
Subscribe to ClojureStream https://clojure.stream
Support on GitHub Sponsors: https://github.com/sponsors/jacekschae Video Courses: https://clojure.stream https://www.learnpedestal.com https://www.learndatomic.com https://www.learnreitit.com https://www.learnreagent.com https://www.learnreframe.com https://www.jacekschae.com

Ingenieure führen
IF172 – FPGA Down Under – Interview mit Glenn Kirilow

Ingenieure führen

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 16:34


Zum Abschluss dieser Themenreihe spreche ich mit einem leitenden FPGA Entwickler aus Down Under, genauer aus Australien. Inhalt der Folge: * Interview mit Glenn Kirilow * Sein Weg zum FPGA Entwickler * VHDL oder Verilog in Australien * Unterschiede in der Ausbildung * Lernplattform TheEEView Der Beitrag IF172 – FPGA Down Under – Interview mit Glenn Kirilow erschien zuerst auf Ingenieurbüro David C. Kirchner.

Ingenieure führen
IF170 – Programmiersprachen für FPGAs

Ingenieure führen

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2022 15:37


Jetzt kennen wir die FPGAs aus den letzten Folgen schon recht gut, so dass ich heute noch einen kurzen Einblick geben möchte, wie die Funktion in die FPGAs kommt und wie diese Sprachen eingesetzt werden. Inhalt der Folge: * Programmier- vs. Beschreibungssprache * Verilog * VHDL * Gemeinsamkeiten * "Geheime" IP Blöcke * Grafische Eingabe * High-Level Synthesis Der Beitrag IF170 – Programmiersprachen für FPGAs erschien zuerst auf Ingenieurbüro David C. Kirchner.

Zero to ASIC Course
Anton Blanchard - Microwatt: a 64 bit OpenPOWER core, VHDL and OpenLANE.

Zero to ASIC Course

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2021 60:27


https://github.com/antonblanchard/microwatt-caravel

Honoring Ron Paul Podcast
Reminiscing About the Past with Master Brian

Honoring Ron Paul Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2020 33:48


Links mentioned in the episode. https://youtu.be/yGNGv384nKE (https://youtu.be/yGNGv384nKE) https://taibbi.substack.com/p/democrats-have-abandoned-civil-liberties Do you need a computer board created? A programable gate array... arrayed? Or something programed in VHDL or some obscure nerd code? Brian Grattan is your goto electrical engineer!

Poziom niżej
#007 - Gdy bug w krzemie drzemie...

Poziom niżej

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2020 63:34


W siódmym odcinku rozmawiamy o błędach w układach krzemowych.Praca z producentami układów krzemowych daje niecodzienną możliwość zajrzenia za kulisy rewolucji naszych czasów tj miniaturyzacji układów cyfrowych. Osławione prawo Moore'a niesie ze sobą wykładniczy wzrost gęstości tranzystorów. Co za tym idzie z biegiem czasu układy stają się coraz bardziej skomplikowane a tym samym pomyłki stają się nieuniknione.W trzech krótkich historiach opowiadanych przez członków załogi Semihalf, staramy się przybliżyć wam ciekawe strony pracy z najnowszą technologią, często niosącą bardzo intensywne tygodnie “walki” na styku oprogramowania i sprzętu. Jeśli zastanawialiście się dlaczego aktualizacje firmware (np BIOSU) są konieczne oraz dlaczego procesory zaraz po premierze rynkowej czasami po prostu nie działają jak reklamuje producent, to ten odcinek powinien odpowiedzieć na wasze pytania.Prowadzący: Radosław Biernacki, Jan Dąbroś, Marcin Wojtas, Stanisław KardachHashtag: FPGA, VHDL, Ryzen, ARM, hardware, symulator, emulator, bug### Plan odcinka# 6:10 - Od czego zaczyna się projektowanie układów krzemowych# 7:30 - Testowanie i praca z SW - symulatory i emulatory# 9:20 - Dlaczego emulacja jest czasochłonna?# 11:50 - Narodziny krzemu - tapeout# 15:10 - Marcin - historia wdrożenia zarządzania energią w ARMv8# 23:30 - Janek - historia błędu przekierowania przerwań do Arm Trustzone# 30:40 - Staszek - historia błędu w procesorze sieciowym do zastosowań DataPlane# 34:10 - Staszek - historia błedu w ARMv8 w instrukcjach LDP/STP # 42:08 - Łatki w firmware# 48:47 - Quirki i upstream do kernela Linuxa# 1:01:00 - Podsumowanie, jak błędy w krzemie manifestują się u użytkowników### Linki# 6:20 - Fabless chip manufacturing - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fabless_manufacturing# 8:50 - Cadance Palladium - https://www.cadence.com/en_US/home/tools/system-design-and-verification/acceleration-and-emulation/palladium-z1.html# 12:45 - Tape-out - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tape-out# 18:00 - Poziomy uprzywilejowania (Exception levels) na ARMv8Prezentacja ARM Trusted Firmware (ale z fajnym opowiadaniem jak Exception Levels działają) https://www.slideshare.net/linaroorg/arm-trusted-firmareforarmv8alcu13Artykuł w magazynie "Programista" numer #63, 08/2017r. "Na granicy światów – technologia bezpieczeństwa ARM TrustZone"Dość szczegółowy opis technologii ARM TrustZone http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.prd29-genc-009492c/PRD29-GENC-009492C_trustzone_security_whitepaper.pdf# 18:35 - Power Management na ARMv8Całość problemu opisana w magazynie “Programista” numer #56, 01/2017r. “Zarządzanie energią w ARMv8”Opis przebiegu usypiania systemu podczas Suspend-To-Ram https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/power/suspend-and-cpuhotplug.rstOpis funkcji zwrotnych zarządzania energią w ARM Trusted Firmware https://github.com/scorp2kk/atf/blob/master/docs/platform-migration-guide.md#22-composite-power-state-framework-platform-api-modifications# 35:10 - Problem atomowości instrukcji LDP/STP:https://developer.arm.com/docs/ddi0487/latest/arm-architecture-reference-manual-armv8-for-armv8-a-architecture-profile - Arm Architecture Reference Manual, rozdział B2.2.1 Requirements for single-copy atomicityhttps://www.element14.com/community/servlet/JiveServlet/previewBody/41836-102-1-229511/ARM.Reference_Manual.pdf - ARMv8 Instruction Set Overview, rozdział 5.2 Memory Access# 51:30 - Upstream quirka do ECAM w ArmadzieDyskusja na listach mailingowych odnośnie możliwości odstępstw od generycznego działania PCIE na ARMv8 opisanego tablicami ACPI https://lkml.org/lkml/2016/9/20/391Opis Extended Configuration Space (ECAM) dla standardu PCIE https://wiki.osdev.org/PCI_Express#Extended_Configuration_SpaceObejście problemu niezgodności ze standardowym kontrolerem przy zastosowaniu sztuczki z tablicami ACPI https://github.com/tianocore/edk2-platforms/commit/a273cb49fe4f98f662bacb69cfd323722e0993a2#diff-e57f3ee89616dd138928c3655287b0d0Proste rozwiązanie problemu na poziomie sterownika w Linuksie - dozwolone tylko przy opisie poprzez Device Tree https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/drivers/pci/controller/pci-host-generic.c#n27

IAS Lab Podcast
13. Programando Hardware: diseño, aplicaciones y vida desde Austria. Narraciones de Carlos Humberto García.

IAS Lab Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2020 55:52


En esta ocasión conversamos con Carlos Humberto García, Ingeniero electrónico de la Universidad Nacional de Colombia, y la universidad Politécnica de Cataluña, cuenta con maestría en diseño electrónico de la Universidad Carinthia de ciencias aplicadas en Villach, Austria y actual diseñador de semiconductores, sensores y microchips en Infineon Technologies en Villach, Austria. En este espacio Carlos explora los diferentes procesos en el diseño, fabricación, y uso de microchips aplicados especialmente en la industria automotriz. Así mismo habla sobre sus modelos mentales, y proyecciones tecnológicas. Notas del episodio VHDL: https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/VHDL Programación concurrente: http://ferestrepoca.github.io/paradigmas-de-programacion/progconcurrente/concurrente_teoria/index.html Frenos ABS: https://www.areatecnologia.com/el_abs.htm QUBits: https://www.academia.edu/30187698/Diferencias_entre_bits_y_qubits_editar Ilustración de portada hecha por Santiago Valencia - IG:Santiago109 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ias-lab-podcast/message

Survival Hacking
SPECIALE35- Survival Hacking - Elettronica personalizzata

Survival Hacking

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2019 70:15


Ne avevo già parlato in uno speciale precedente, raccontando un po' un era oramai lontana, dove per risparmiare un po' di soldi, si lavorava duro. In questo episodio, vi racconto una vera storia vissuta, cercando di trasmettervi quella che è stata una grande esperienza lavorativa ricca di grandi soddisfazioni.Immagini e storia dell'amica prima che venissero integrati i tre chip custom.http://obligement.free.fr/articles/lorraine.phpEpisodio sulle logiche programmabilihttps://www.spreaker.com/user/runtime/sp05-survival-hacking-logica-programmabiAd ogni modo mi trovate qui:https://t.me/technopillzriothttp://www.survivalhacking.itSostenete Runtime Radio:http://runtimeradio.it/ancheio/Sostenete Survival hackinghttps://www.paypal.me/SurvivalHackingLe mie BGM suPond5https://www.pond5.com/artist/thoroide#1/2064 Spotifyhttps://open.spotify.com/artist/1coeUect3UnQ4HjRQQu6EO Apple Musichttps://itunes.apple.com/us/album/presentation/1461490308?app=music https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/magic-ep/1461486916?app=music https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/sound-dimension-ep/1461536417?app=music Ituneshttps://itunes.apple.com/us/album/presentation/1461490308?app=itunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/magic-ep/1461486916?app=itunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/sound-dimension-ep/1461536417?app=itunes Youtubehttps://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mH3bw9JFuGk1BvhWluht0ao-LDSHuwKNw https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kU6l_g3Y4mgJP0B7PFJ4SP3mCIUiiocTQ https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_l5Px6E2_RSq6V7LgjHpYrWGYOF6W7QGzs Deezerhttps://www.deezer.com/it/artist/5504122?utm_source=deezer&utm_content=album-94957612&utm_term=0_1556297485&utm_medium=web

Survival Hacking
SPECIALE35- Survival Hacking - Elettronica personalizzata

Survival Hacking

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2019 70:15


Ne avevo già parlato in uno speciale precedente, raccontando un po' un era oramai lontana, dove per risparmiare un po' di soldi, si lavorava duro. In questo episodio, vi racconto una vera storia vissuta, cercando di trasmettervi quella che è stata una grande esperienza lavorativa ricca di grandi soddisfazioni.Immagini e storia dell'amica prima che venissero integrati i tre chip custom.http://obligement.free.fr/articles/lorraine.phpEpisodio sulle logiche programmabilihttps://www.spreaker.com/user/runtime/sp05-survival-hacking-logica-programmabiAd ogni modo mi trovate qui:https://t.me/technopillzriothttp://www.survivalhacking.itSostenete Runtime Radio:http://runtimeradio.it/ancheio/Sostenete Survival hackinghttps://www.paypal.me/SurvivalHackingLe mie BGM suPond5https://www.pond5.com/artist/thoroide#1/2064 Spotifyhttps://open.spotify.com/artist/1coeUect3UnQ4HjRQQu6EO Apple Musichttps://itunes.apple.com/us/album/presentation/1461490308?app=music https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/magic-ep/1461486916?app=music https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/sound-dimension-ep/1461536417?app=music Ituneshttps://itunes.apple.com/us/album/presentation/1461490308?app=itunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/magic-ep/1461486916?app=itunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/sound-dimension-ep/1461536417?app=itunes Youtubehttps://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mH3bw9JFuGk1BvhWluht0ao-LDSHuwKNw https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kU6l_g3Y4mgJP0B7PFJ4SP3mCIUiiocTQ https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_l5Px6E2_RSq6V7LgjHpYrWGYOF6W7QGzs Deezerhttps://www.deezer.com/it/artist/5504122?utm_source=deezer&utm_content=album-94957612&utm_term=0_1556297485&utm_medium=web

Esperienze Digitali Podcast
Ultimo intervento alla maratona 8h con Francesco Richichi

Esperienze Digitali Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2019 73:10


Finalmente siamo arrivati ala fine della Maratona live 8 ore con l'ultimo intervento da parte di Francesco Richichi che ci presenta il suo podcast su un argomento molto di nicchia ma molto seguito su un linguaggio macchina, VHDL. Dove racconta come interagire con questo linguaggio, che sinceramente non conoscevo ma per chi lo usa è davvero utile per capire tutte le sue funzionalità. ----------------- Maggiori info su Esperienze Digitali https://www.esperienzedigitali.info/2019/07/27/109-ultimo-intervento-alla-maratona-8h-con-francesco-richichi/ ----------------- Music: "Cheery Monday" e "Sweeter Vermouth " Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

finalmente dove ultimo maratona intervento maggiori vhdl esperienze digitali francesco richichi sweeter vermouth kevin macleod
Surf-VHDL Podcast
Q&A#4 RAM Parallelism

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2019 6:06


Come faccio a parallelizzare un blocco di RAM?Scopriamo come fare a aumentare il numero di bit della parola di una RAMWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/courses

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Q&A#10 RAM Parallelism

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2019 3:40


How I can parallelize a RAM in FPGAhttps://surf-vhdl.com/how-to-implement-a-multi-port-memory-on-fpga/Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/courses

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
ep#22-Multiplier optimization

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2019 5:23


Learn how to optimize a multiplier in particular cases:For a technical analysis go to the post:https://surf-vhdl.link/OptimizationVhdl12b25Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/courses

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#26-Ottimizzazione di moltiplicatori

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2019 6:25


In questa puntata vediamo come fare per ottimizzare un moltiplicatore in condizioni particolarihttps://surf-vhdl.link/OptimizationVhdl12b25Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/courses

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#25-Serial-to-Parallel e Parallel-to-Serial

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2019 8:32


Link ai post Serial to parallel e Parallel to Serialhttps://surf-vhdl.link/332b9Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlCorso VHDL su Teachablehttps://surf-vhdl.link/corsiIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#21-Serial-to-Parallel Parallel-to-Serial converter

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2019 7:24


Link to the post:https://surf-vhdl.link/99990Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Surf-VHDL Podcast
Q&A#3 Alla ricerca del clock perduto

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2019 8:19


In questo episodio rispondiamo alla domanda su come connettere un clock ad una FPGA.Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/courses

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Q&A#09-I need a clock!

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2019 9:01


In this podcast we will understand how to connect a clock signal to our FPGAWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/courses

Surf-VHDL Podcast
Q&A#2-cosa è il dithering

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2019 5:02


In questo episodio scopriamo cosa è il dithering e quando possiamo utilizzare questa tecnica.Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Q&A#08- What is the dithering

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2019 4:30


What is dithering? Where we can use this technique?Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
ep#20-VHDL Generic

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2019 5:34


VHDL GenericWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Surf-VHDL Podcast
Sveliamo il segreto: A cosa serve il VHDL

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2019 8:21


Finalmente l'ho capito anche io.In questa puntata voglio svelare il segreto del perché si utilizza il VHDL.Scopriamolo insieme ad un ospite specialeWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#19-Iterative statement

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2019 4:43


Even if the VHDL is not a software language, we can find a tyoica SW statement, the iterative statement. Let’s see how to use thishttps://t.me/SurfVhdl/92Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Kurzschluss Junkies
Die Mischung macht's [0x05]

Kurzschluss Junkies

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2019 45:12


Die Kurzschluss Junkies sind unterwegs und reden mit Raphael und Dominik über Ihre Erfahrungen als Berufseinsteiger, persönliche Interessen, Projekte und Weiterbildung. Dominik empfiehlt für kapazitive Touch-Anwendungen einen PSoC von Cypress. Für eine 1-Button Lösung hat er den AT42QT1012 ausgewählt. Dieser benötigt keine Software um einen Touch Button zu realisieren. Außerdem weist er darauf hin , dass eine Ground-Plane auf dem Board besser gehatched wird, also die Kupfermasse der Plane zu reduzieren. So erhält man eine gute Schirmwirkung, ohne die Signalstärke zu sehr zu bedämpfen. Raphael empfiehlt für FPGA-Entwicklung Evaluation Boards von Digilent (bei Amazon) und Terasic. Weiterhin erzählt er von den verschiedenen Toolchains und die Eigenheiten von Verilog und VHDL. Bei opencores.org gibt's viele Beispiele von denen man lernen kann. Dominik und Raphael erzählen von den Erfahrungen als Berufseinsteiger und wie sie gelernt haben nach dem Studium Elektronik zu entwickeln. Sie geben Tipps, wie man mit dem Gefühl umgeht, keine Ahnung zu haben und wann man aufstehen und sagen soll: "Keine Ahnung, kann ich nicht." Zur Weiterentwicklung nutzen wir alle das Internet, Bücher und auch Schulungen. Aber im Endeffekt ist alles Learning by Doing. Das Entwickeln von Hardware ist eine Mischung aus Wissen, Erfahrung, Interesse und Black Magic. Natürlich haben wir auch über private Projekte gesprochen. Raphael entwickelt gerade eine Löt-Station für Weller RT Lötspitzen. Der Grund dafür ist ein Elektor Artikel, der ihm negativ aufgefallen ist. Seine Station bekommt den STM32F103 als Mikrocontroller, hat mehrere Varianten für die Strommessungen, ein Display und eine Schnittstelle für Erweiterungen. Die Dokumentation wird dann HIER zu finden sein, wenn er damit mal angefangen hat. (Wenn da noch kein Link ist, hat er noch nicht angefangen) Dominik beschäftigt sich mit Word-Clocks. Er hat da schon einige gebaut, jetzt gerade baut er eine Armbanduhr-Variante mit Alu Gehäuse und super kleinen Bauteilen. Zum Schluss erzählt Raphael von seiner Zeit als Werksstudent in der ASIC-Entwicklung.

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#18-the conditional assignment in VHDL

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2019 7:28


Let’s understand how to implement a conditional statement in VHDLimage for the episodehttp://t.me/SurfVhdl/86Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Wait Statements in VHDLReference to pictures:https://t.me/SurfVhdl/82Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Survival Hacking
SPECIALE05 - Survival Hacking - Logiche Programmabili

Survival Hacking

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2019 31:31


Quando un tempo l'elettronica si faceva per davvero e il gioco si faceva più duro ecco entrare in scena la magia dei circuiti integrati programmabili, grazie ai quali era possibile crearsi il proprio chip personalizzato.Un tecnologia che si è spinta fino ai giorni nostri, regalandoci dispositivi unici, che permettono ai designer di creare hardware estremamente complesso, operando con linguaggi di programmazione per la descrizione hardware estremamente evoluti come il VHDL.Un parentesi veloce su un aspetto dell'elettronica digitale, spesso passata inosservata, ma fonte di grandi creazioni.https://drive.google.com/open?id=1aBV8LtRpWQcdOWheTBIT_o2Md8FfnRpBhttps://drive.google.com/open?id=1RURILkqORyShYf375lr1TEvFPHXrfHGChttps://drive.google.com/open?id=106CMenjsgAYNyFnIZpP05M8h4EFZYJFGQuesto episodio è un contributo aggiuntivo di geekcookies, un podcast degli amici Francesco Tucci e Giuliano Pisoni.https://www.spreaker.com/show/geekcookieshttps://www.spreaker.com/show/pillole-dibitAd ogni modo mi trovate qui:https://t.me/technopillzriothttp://www.survivalhacking.itSostenete Runtime Radio:http://runtimeradio.it/ancheio/Sostenete Survival hackinghttps://www.paypal.me/SurvivalHackingProgramma per la pulizia audio automatica, utilizzato.http://www.podcleaner.comLe mie BGM Music su POND5https://www.pond5.com/index.php?page=edit_item&itemid=103455148https://www.pond5.com/index.php?page=edit_item&itemid=91646691https://www.pond5.com/index.php?page=edit_item&itemid=91630881https://www.pond5.com/index.php?page=edit_item&itemid=91628674

Survival Hacking
SPECIALE05 - Survival Hacking - Logiche Programmabili

Survival Hacking

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2019 31:31


Quando un tempo l'elettronica si faceva per davvero e il gioco si faceva più duro ecco entrare in scena la magia dei circuiti integrati programmabili, grazie ai quali era possibile crearsi il proprio chip personalizzato.Un tecnologia che si è spinta fino ai giorni nostri, regalandoci dispositivi unici, che permettono ai designer di creare hardware estremamente complesso, operando con linguaggi di programmazione per la descrizione hardware estremamente evoluti come il VHDL.Un parentesi veloce su un aspetto dell'elettronica digitale, spesso passata inosservata, ma fonte di grandi creazioni.https://drive.google.com/open?id=1aBV8LtRpWQcdOWheTBIT_o2Md8FfnRpBhttps://drive.google.com/open?id=1RURILkqORyShYf375lr1TEvFPHXrfHGChttps://drive.google.com/open?id=106CMenjsgAYNyFnIZpP05M8h4EFZYJFGQuesto episodio è un contributo aggiuntivo di geekcookies, un podcast degli amici Francesco Tucci e Giuliano Pisoni.https://www.spreaker.com/show/geekcookieshttps://www.spreaker.com/show/pillole-dibitAd ogni modo mi trovate qui:https://t.me/technopillzriothttp://www.survivalhacking.itSostenete Runtime Radio:http://runtimeradio.it/ancheio/Sostenete Survival hackinghttps://www.paypal.me/SurvivalHackingProgramma per la pulizia audio automatica, utilizzato.http://www.podcleaner.comLe mie BGM Music su POND5https://www.pond5.com/index.php?page=edit_item&itemid=103455148https://www.pond5.com/index.php?page=edit_item&itemid=91646691https://www.pond5.com/index.php?page=edit_item&itemid=91630881https://www.pond5.com/index.php?page=edit_item&itemid=91628674

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Q&A#07- What is the first thing that a recruiter does?

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2019 4:04


Q&A#07- What is the first thing that a recruiter does?When a recruiter needs to hire you as VHDL expert, what do you think he or she will do to understand if you are good for him or her?What can you do in order to result a VHDL user?Let’s see in this podcast.Here you can find the feedback of my VHDL student https://surf-vhdl.link/vhdl-studentTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/courses

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#16-VHDL process

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2019 7:17


And now is time to introduce formally a Processlink to the imageshttps://t.me/SurfVhdl/78Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

francis preve vhdl coursesmusic
Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Q&A#06- How can I generate a new clock from a reference clock?

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2019 10:38


I receiver a question from Sandip. He got my reference, from my post on DDS.The question is:“I want to generate Square of 999kHz, 1000kHz and 1001kHzin VHDL Language and that would be implemented on a Zynq ZC702 evaluation board.Is it possible by using the DDS.? Can you provide your expertise and comment on it.”Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#15-VHDL Packages

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2019 3:51


VHDL Packageshttp://t.me/SurfVhdl/74Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#14-VHDL object

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2019 6:11


After signal introduction, let's view what are the remaining VHDL objectsImages https://t.me/SurfVhdl/72Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Q&A#05- Does the USB transfer work as UART?

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2019 9:15


I received a question from Haitham. He have to connect a computer to an FPGA using USB connection in order to transfer data from FPGA to the PC. Haitham is following my VHDL course “Start Learning VHDL Using FPGA”. In this course the last LAB implement communication between PC and FPGA using UART channel.After starting the course, Haitham asked me: “Does the USB transfer work as UART”?Let’s see the answer. Here the link to the picture on the telegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdl/68Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
QA#04-What is the VHDL design flow

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2019 7:09


In this Q&A episode I want to answer to the question on what is the VHLD design flowTo better follow the episode, see the picture on the telegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdl/65Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#13-a way to remember-the flip-flop

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2019 5:41


Introducing Flip-Flop in VHDLLink to the picture in the telegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdl/61Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
QA#3-plzz send the test bench

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2019 3:40


This is the question many of you ask me very oftenI wish to give you some hint and a test bench template I use in my VHDL designs Here the link to the test bench template: https://t.me/SurfVhdl/58Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#12-VHDL Simulation

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2019 5:51


A brief overview to setup a ModelSim simulation environmentLink to the episode#12 picturet.me/SurfVhdl/53Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#11-what is a signal

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2019 3:53


Introduce signal in VHDL, what is a signal and how to use it.Image relative to this episodeWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#10-More on driver the resolution function

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2019 8:13


Solving a dispute in VHDL: the resolution functionLink to image for the episode#10Solving a dispute in VHDL: the resolution functiont.me/SurfVhdl/50Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#09-What is a driver in VHDL

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2019 3:57


What is a driver in VHDL?Images for the episodet.me/SurfVhdl/46Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
QA#2-SPI-controller-simulation with Vivado

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2019 2:03


In this brief episode I want to answer a question from Klajdi on simulation of SPI controller using Vivado Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/courses

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
QA#1-Do we need clock and address

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2019 3:55


Answering to Prashant. He asked me this question “What do we have to give as an input for i_clk and i_addr?”relative to the post: https://surf-vhdl.com/how-to-generate-sine-samples-in-vhdl/Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#08-concurrency

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2019 6:36


In this episode we will introduce the Concurrency conceptWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#07-introducing the entity

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2019 9:53


Introducing Entity. The basic building VHDL blockWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#06-Ok, and now how do I test it?

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2019 4:36


Let’s understand how digital electronics help us in the debug and test of our designWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
EP#04-Two is enough

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2019 6:26


Why do we use only two logic level in digital design?Figures:https://t.me/SurfVhdl/32Websitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#03-a really important thing the interfaces

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2019 4:41


Let's introduce the FLAT and Hierarchical methodology in Hardware DesignWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#02-the three secrets that no hardware designer will ever tell you

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2019 5:09


Start understanding few rules for a good VHDL design habitsWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#01-Why you should learn VHDL

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2019 5:21


Do you like digital electronic? Why you should learn VHDL? Let's understand in this episodeWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/coursesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com

Five Minute VHDL Podcast
Ep#0-why a podcast on VHDL

Five Minute VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2019 4:41


Episode zero to introduce the Surf-VHDL Podcast:Five Minute VHDLWebsitehttps://surf-vhdl.comTelegram channelhttps://t.me/SurfVhdlYou can contact memail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlTeachable courseshttps://surf-vhdl.link/cousesMusic by Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#24-rendiamo parametriche le nostre entità

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2018 7:13


Rendiamo parametriche le nostre entità.Link alle immagini di questa puntata.Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlCorso VHDL su Teachablehttps://surf-vhdl.link/corsiIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#23-per superare la monotonia

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2018 10:36


Per superare la monotonia, invece si riscrivere lo stesso codice, impariamo ad implementare le strutture iterativeLink alle immagini di questa puntata.https://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/77Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlCorso VHDL su Teachablehttps://surf-vhdl.link/corsiIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#22-ogni tanto bisogna scendere a compromessi

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2018 8:13


Ogni tanto bisogna scendere a compromessi.Impariamo a implementare le condizioni in VHDLLink alle immagini di questa puntata.Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlCorso VHDL su Teachablehttps://surf-vhdl.link/corsiIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#21-Wait... fermiamoci

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2018 18:31


Fermiamoci per un po’. Il WAITLink alle immagini di questa puntata.t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/65Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlCorso VHDL su Teachablehttps://surf-vhdl.link/corsiIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#20-Processi

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2018 12:05


Finalmente andiamo a processo… non quello che pensi tu, ma qualcosa di sequenziale in un mondo concorrente. Link alle immagini di questa puntata.Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlCorso VHDL su Teachablehttps://surf-vhdl.link/corsi

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#19-Packages

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2018 15:16


Introduciamo uno strumento molto utile in VHDL che ci permette di creare le nostre librerieLink alle immagini di questa puntata.Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlCorso VHDL su Teachablehttps://surf-vhdl.link/corsi

packages vhdl comcanale
Surf-VHDL Podcast
#18-Oggetti in VHDL

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2018 13:34


Dopo I segnali, vediamo gli altri tipi di oggetti predefiniti in VHDLLink alle immagini di questa puntata.Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlCorso VHDL su Teachablehttps://surf-vhdl.link/corsi

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#17-i segnali

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2018 13:59


Introduciamo il concetto di segnale in VHDL. Cosa è ed a cosa serve.Link alle immagini della puntatat.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/52Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdl

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#16-ancora sul concetto di driver

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2018 11:48


Riprendiamo ancora il concetto fondamentale di driverPer seguire meglio la puntata sul canale telegram trovi le immagini relative a questa puntata:t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/49Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdl

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#15-il concetto di driver

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2018 8:26


Introduciamo un concetto fondamentale nella progettazione hardware: il driverPer seguire meglio la puntata sul canale telegram trovi le immagini relative a questa puntata:t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/44Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdl

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#14-finalmente iniziamo a ricordare qualcosa il flip-flop

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2018 16:07


Introduciamo finalmente gli elemento di memoria sequenziale: il Flip-FlopLink alle immagini della puntata:https://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/42Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#13-simuliamo

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2018 11:39


Fermiamoci un attimo e vediamo cosa utilizzare per simulare il nostro progetto VHDLLink al post che spiega come scaricare Modelsimhttps://surf-vhdl.link/modelsimLink alle immagini della puntatahttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/38Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdl

fpga vhdl comcanale
Surf-VHDL Podcast
#12-bisogna arrivare in orario... usiamo il clock

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2018 10:44


Introduciamo il concetto di clock in un progetto digitaleimmagini sul canale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/36Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv
MAS 061: James Shore

All Angular Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2018 40:59


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: James Shore This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with James Shore who is the author of the book, “The Art of Agile.” James is a thought leader in the Agile software development community. He combines deep technical expertise with whole-system thinking to help development teams worldwide achieve great things! Check out his complete biography here! Chuck and James talk about Agile development, James’ background, and future projects! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:48 – Chuck: Welcome! James was on a past episode, which was show 205! Give us an introduction, please! 1:05 – James: I have been involved with the software industry since 1991. I have written a book and it’s fairly evergreen. 1:30 – Chuck: Yeah, I remember that’s when the Agile development was getting really, really hot! 2:09 – James: Yeah in the early 2000s there was this energy to do software really well, and it seems like it’s turned into this bureaucracy. I find that to be depressing a tiny bit. 2:50 – Chuck: Yeah, I agree. 3:01 – James: Going back to a perspective where excellence is no longer the priority; excellence in your craft. 3:31 – Chuck. 3:34 – James: Yeah that was Bob Marten.  James talks about the Agile movement. 4:22 – Chuck: This show is a walk back throughout your story. Let’s talk about HOW you got into this stuff. 4:40 – James talks about his background. 4:58 – Chuck talks about his Grandpa and his experience with technology when he was young. 5:10 – James: ...it had a whopping 2K of memory! That’s really how I got involved into programming. Later on I got a Trash 80 then an Apple 2, so I had programming in through my blood. 6:01 – Chuck. 6:08 – James talks about switching between computer and antenna, and his black and white T.V. He also talks about the electrical engineering program at the university. 7:16 – Chuck: I studied ad received my computer science degree. 7:28 – James. 7:34 – Chuck: You have been in the industry since 2001 and you are a bit older than me. 7:50 – James: My first job was in 1994. Then I wrote some things with Fido Net. Fido Net was this early online form thing. Sort of like Used Net / Used Groups (online bulletin web forms) via the telephone dial-up. They were hobbyists running this out from their home. It was basically chat forms. Once you have some experience (doesn’t matter your degree) – it’s...have you done this before? 9:30 – Chuck: This is RIGHT in-line with what I say in my eBook that I am developing now. 10:00 – James: I didn’t even post that I was looking for a job, but I got very lucky. 10:15 – Chuck: What is your journey look like and how did you get into Agile development? 10:30 – James talks about his Kickstarter, knowledge in JavaScript, programming experience, and more here – check it out! 13:16 – Chuck: How did you get to Agile development? 13:31 – James: I was programming throughout my teens. I was working on a really complicated project. I still play Dungeons and Dragons (D&D). It was the most complicated program that I built at that point. I had it in my head and then I didn’t understand it anymore. The program collapsed. To me that was really transformative b/c it’s not writing the algorithms but how it all works together. Then this taught me how to communicate the design to the other members on the team to make it work. 15:50 – James: Have you heard of Rational Rose? You don’t hear about it anymore b/c it was a complete flop. 17:20 – Chuck: Wow! 17:33 – James: It was actually detrimental to get it done. It really was a crisis of faith. I ran into this book: Object Modeling in Color by Peter Coad. Extreme Programming is mentioned, too, by James’ coworker! 21:10 – Chuck: It’s so interesting to me. We focus so much on the technological side, we forget to talk about the people, and the other sides to this. It’s easy to overlook this other stuff. 21:47 – James: There is so much silver bullet thinking within this industry. The original communication from person-to-person is so crucial. It’s so important to software development. Ultimately, the computer doesn’t care, but the collaboration is the real trick and the real challenge. 23:10 – Chuck talks about his brother and his computer science courses experience. 24:27 – James: It could be that 1 team could solve a problem but nowadays it’s working with multiple teams. People want to water things down to help facilitate – but don’t do that. There is a huge large scale Agile that is large interdependent teams. 25:19 – Chuck: MFCEO is a podcast that I am listening to now. He says that nobody wants to sit down and dictate what each member will be responsible for. Chuck reads a quote from an episode from MFCEO – check it out! 26:54 – James: It’s something that people have lost track of. I still program daily even though I do this Agile stuff as well. I have been programming for 25 years and Extreme Programming was the most effective thing for me throughout my career. James: I think XP is the time (now) to have a comeback! 29:41 – Chuck: That was my experience, too. We pushed one team to go to Agile, and then we went to our boss. Chuck: We’d sit down every two weeks and have an Agile-Perspective (what is working and what isn’t working). We are talking about HOW we are writing the software, and that is really what we are after. 30:54 – James: You are building the TEAM that builds the project. Of course, you need to have consistencies across the team, and every team is different b/c every member has different personalities. Mod Programming is we are going to work as a whole group around a screen. Personally, that is not my style but I would TRY it. If it worked for that team then I would do it. 32:00 – Chuck: That is the beauty of it. With this set of programmers x, y, and z may or may not work, and that is O.K. 32:25 – James: I heard about Extreme Programming and I thought it was nuts!! 32:40 – Chuck. 32:44 – James: The more I tried it, and the more it worked. Try Extreme Programming b/c it’s totally a different experience. It’s my book that I wrote 10 years ago but it still is applicable today. Try it for a few months (3 months) or so, b/c it takes time to figure out the different terms and such. Go try out a bunch of new different things, but figuring out HOW to make it work for me. 34:05 – Chuck: Yeah, you need data. Look at the data. Go experiment. 34:47 – James: Try it for real. Check out this essay: “We tried baseball, and it didn’t work.” James: Many things only work in context!  What we do is we change the context in Agile. 35:58 – Chuck: What are you working on now? 36:00 – James: I am actually working on AgileFluency.org. It’s a set of tools for coaches and leaders to CHANGE their context. How can you find those constraints and invest on changing those. 36:31 – Chuck: Where do they go to find you? 36:40 – James: My website - it’s the ugliest website, but it’s been working since 2003. 36:54 – Picks! 37:05 – Fresh Books! END – CacheFly Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue React Slack Zone.js GitHub – Zone.js Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv Timex Sinclair FidoNet VHDL Book: Java Modeling Color with UML Pivotal Labs Book: The ART OF AGILE DEVELOPMENT BY JAMES SHORE James Shore’s Website Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Chuck Podcast: MFCEO James Package Management Tool: Nix.org

art google apple change team color panel kickstarter trash dungeons and dragons ebooks sort personally dungeons react slack agile grandpa github javascript 2k xp nix advertisement vue utf angular freshbooks jquery uml extreme programming cachefly mfceo pivotal labs dragons d charles max wood james it james you matchtype james shore james yeah fidonet chuck it agile fluency james there james going chuck yeah vhdl timex sinclair chuck you chuck how activetab my angular story get a coder job chuck where peter coad chuck welcome rational rose object modeling james have java modeling color uml enterprise consulting credentials james many 252bslack podcast mfceo
Devchat.tv Master Feed
MAS 061: James Shore

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2018 40:59


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: James Shore This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with James Shore who is the author of the book, “The Art of Agile.” James is a thought leader in the Agile software development community. He combines deep technical expertise with whole-system thinking to help development teams worldwide achieve great things! Check out his complete biography here! Chuck and James talk about Agile development, James’ background, and future projects! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:48 – Chuck: Welcome! James was on a past episode, which was show 205! Give us an introduction, please! 1:05 – James: I have been involved with the software industry since 1991. I have written a book and it’s fairly evergreen. 1:30 – Chuck: Yeah, I remember that’s when the Agile development was getting really, really hot! 2:09 – James: Yeah in the early 2000s there was this energy to do software really well, and it seems like it’s turned into this bureaucracy. I find that to be depressing a tiny bit. 2:50 – Chuck: Yeah, I agree. 3:01 – James: Going back to a perspective where excellence is no longer the priority; excellence in your craft. 3:31 – Chuck. 3:34 – James: Yeah that was Bob Marten.  James talks about the Agile movement. 4:22 – Chuck: This show is a walk back throughout your story. Let’s talk about HOW you got into this stuff. 4:40 – James talks about his background. 4:58 – Chuck talks about his Grandpa and his experience with technology when he was young. 5:10 – James: ...it had a whopping 2K of memory! That’s really how I got involved into programming. Later on I got a Trash 80 then an Apple 2, so I had programming in through my blood. 6:01 – Chuck. 6:08 – James talks about switching between computer and antenna, and his black and white T.V. He also talks about the electrical engineering program at the university. 7:16 – Chuck: I studied ad received my computer science degree. 7:28 – James. 7:34 – Chuck: You have been in the industry since 2001 and you are a bit older than me. 7:50 – James: My first job was in 1994. Then I wrote some things with Fido Net. Fido Net was this early online form thing. Sort of like Used Net / Used Groups (online bulletin web forms) via the telephone dial-up. They were hobbyists running this out from their home. It was basically chat forms. Once you have some experience (doesn’t matter your degree) – it’s...have you done this before? 9:30 – Chuck: This is RIGHT in-line with what I say in my eBook that I am developing now. 10:00 – James: I didn’t even post that I was looking for a job, but I got very lucky. 10:15 – Chuck: What is your journey look like and how did you get into Agile development? 10:30 – James talks about his Kickstarter, knowledge in JavaScript, programming experience, and more here – check it out! 13:16 – Chuck: How did you get to Agile development? 13:31 – James: I was programming throughout my teens. I was working on a really complicated project. I still play Dungeons and Dragons (D&D). It was the most complicated program that I built at that point. I had it in my head and then I didn’t understand it anymore. The program collapsed. To me that was really transformative b/c it’s not writing the algorithms but how it all works together. Then this taught me how to communicate the design to the other members on the team to make it work. 15:50 – James: Have you heard of Rational Rose? You don’t hear about it anymore b/c it was a complete flop. 17:20 – Chuck: Wow! 17:33 – James: It was actually detrimental to get it done. It really was a crisis of faith. I ran into this book: Object Modeling in Color by Peter Coad. Extreme Programming is mentioned, too, by James’ coworker! 21:10 – Chuck: It’s so interesting to me. We focus so much on the technological side, we forget to talk about the people, and the other sides to this. It’s easy to overlook this other stuff. 21:47 – James: There is so much silver bullet thinking within this industry. The original communication from person-to-person is so crucial. It’s so important to software development. Ultimately, the computer doesn’t care, but the collaboration is the real trick and the real challenge. 23:10 – Chuck talks about his brother and his computer science courses experience. 24:27 – James: It could be that 1 team could solve a problem but nowadays it’s working with multiple teams. People want to water things down to help facilitate – but don’t do that. There is a huge large scale Agile that is large interdependent teams. 25:19 – Chuck: MFCEO is a podcast that I am listening to now. He says that nobody wants to sit down and dictate what each member will be responsible for. Chuck reads a quote from an episode from MFCEO – check it out! 26:54 – James: It’s something that people have lost track of. I still program daily even though I do this Agile stuff as well. I have been programming for 25 years and Extreme Programming was the most effective thing for me throughout my career. James: I think XP is the time (now) to have a comeback! 29:41 – Chuck: That was my experience, too. We pushed one team to go to Agile, and then we went to our boss. Chuck: We’d sit down every two weeks and have an Agile-Perspective (what is working and what isn’t working). We are talking about HOW we are writing the software, and that is really what we are after. 30:54 – James: You are building the TEAM that builds the project. Of course, you need to have consistencies across the team, and every team is different b/c every member has different personalities. Mod Programming is we are going to work as a whole group around a screen. Personally, that is not my style but I would TRY it. If it worked for that team then I would do it. 32:00 – Chuck: That is the beauty of it. With this set of programmers x, y, and z may or may not work, and that is O.K. 32:25 – James: I heard about Extreme Programming and I thought it was nuts!! 32:40 – Chuck. 32:44 – James: The more I tried it, and the more it worked. Try Extreme Programming b/c it’s totally a different experience. It’s my book that I wrote 10 years ago but it still is applicable today. Try it for a few months (3 months) or so, b/c it takes time to figure out the different terms and such. Go try out a bunch of new different things, but figuring out HOW to make it work for me. 34:05 – Chuck: Yeah, you need data. Look at the data. Go experiment. 34:47 – James: Try it for real. Check out this essay: “We tried baseball, and it didn’t work.” James: Many things only work in context!  What we do is we change the context in Agile. 35:58 – Chuck: What are you working on now? 36:00 – James: I am actually working on AgileFluency.org. It’s a set of tools for coaches and leaders to CHANGE their context. How can you find those constraints and invest on changing those. 36:31 – Chuck: Where do they go to find you? 36:40 – James: My website - it’s the ugliest website, but it’s been working since 2003. 36:54 – Picks! 37:05 – Fresh Books! END – CacheFly Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue React Slack Zone.js GitHub – Zone.js Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv Timex Sinclair FidoNet VHDL Book: Java Modeling Color with UML Pivotal Labs Book: The ART OF AGILE DEVELOPMENT BY JAMES SHORE James Shore’s Website Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Chuck Podcast: MFCEO James Package Management Tool: Nix.org

art google apple change team color panel kickstarter trash dungeons and dragons ebooks sort personally dungeons react slack agile grandpa github javascript 2k xp nix advertisement vue utf angular freshbooks jquery uml extreme programming cachefly mfceo pivotal labs dragons d charles max wood james it james you matchtype james shore james yeah fidonet chuck it agile fluency james there james going chuck yeah vhdl timex sinclair chuck you chuck how activetab my angular story get a coder job chuck where peter coad chuck welcome rational rose object modeling james have java modeling color uml enterprise consulting credentials james many 252bslack podcast mfceo
My Angular Story
MAS 061: James Shore

My Angular Story

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2018 40:59


Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: James Shore This week on My Angular Story, Charles speaks with James Shore who is the author of the book, “The Art of Agile.” James is a thought leader in the Agile software development community. He combines deep technical expertise with whole-system thinking to help development teams worldwide achieve great things! Check out his complete biography here! Chuck and James talk about Agile development, James’ background, and future projects! In particular, we dive pretty deep on: 0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! 0:48 – Chuck: Welcome! James was on a past episode, which was show 205! Give us an introduction, please! 1:05 – James: I have been involved with the software industry since 1991. I have written a book and it’s fairly evergreen. 1:30 – Chuck: Yeah, I remember that’s when the Agile development was getting really, really hot! 2:09 – James: Yeah in the early 2000s there was this energy to do software really well, and it seems like it’s turned into this bureaucracy. I find that to be depressing a tiny bit. 2:50 – Chuck: Yeah, I agree. 3:01 – James: Going back to a perspective where excellence is no longer the priority; excellence in your craft. 3:31 – Chuck. 3:34 – James: Yeah that was Bob Marten.  James talks about the Agile movement. 4:22 – Chuck: This show is a walk back throughout your story. Let’s talk about HOW you got into this stuff. 4:40 – James talks about his background. 4:58 – Chuck talks about his Grandpa and his experience with technology when he was young. 5:10 – James: ...it had a whopping 2K of memory! That’s really how I got involved into programming. Later on I got a Trash 80 then an Apple 2, so I had programming in through my blood. 6:01 – Chuck. 6:08 – James talks about switching between computer and antenna, and his black and white T.V. He also talks about the electrical engineering program at the university. 7:16 – Chuck: I studied ad received my computer science degree. 7:28 – James. 7:34 – Chuck: You have been in the industry since 2001 and you are a bit older than me. 7:50 – James: My first job was in 1994. Then I wrote some things with Fido Net. Fido Net was this early online form thing. Sort of like Used Net / Used Groups (online bulletin web forms) via the telephone dial-up. They were hobbyists running this out from their home. It was basically chat forms. Once you have some experience (doesn’t matter your degree) – it’s...have you done this before? 9:30 – Chuck: This is RIGHT in-line with what I say in my eBook that I am developing now. 10:00 – James: I didn’t even post that I was looking for a job, but I got very lucky. 10:15 – Chuck: What is your journey look like and how did you get into Agile development? 10:30 – James talks about his Kickstarter, knowledge in JavaScript, programming experience, and more here – check it out! 13:16 – Chuck: How did you get to Agile development? 13:31 – James: I was programming throughout my teens. I was working on a really complicated project. I still play Dungeons and Dragons (D&D). It was the most complicated program that I built at that point. I had it in my head and then I didn’t understand it anymore. The program collapsed. To me that was really transformative b/c it’s not writing the algorithms but how it all works together. Then this taught me how to communicate the design to the other members on the team to make it work. 15:50 – James: Have you heard of Rational Rose? You don’t hear about it anymore b/c it was a complete flop. 17:20 – Chuck: Wow! 17:33 – James: It was actually detrimental to get it done. It really was a crisis of faith. I ran into this book: Object Modeling in Color by Peter Coad. Extreme Programming is mentioned, too, by James’ coworker! 21:10 – Chuck: It’s so interesting to me. We focus so much on the technological side, we forget to talk about the people, and the other sides to this. It’s easy to overlook this other stuff. 21:47 – James: There is so much silver bullet thinking within this industry. The original communication from person-to-person is so crucial. It’s so important to software development. Ultimately, the computer doesn’t care, but the collaboration is the real trick and the real challenge. 23:10 – Chuck talks about his brother and his computer science courses experience. 24:27 – James: It could be that 1 team could solve a problem but nowadays it’s working with multiple teams. People want to water things down to help facilitate – but don’t do that. There is a huge large scale Agile that is large interdependent teams. 25:19 – Chuck: MFCEO is a podcast that I am listening to now. He says that nobody wants to sit down and dictate what each member will be responsible for. Chuck reads a quote from an episode from MFCEO – check it out! 26:54 – James: It’s something that people have lost track of. I still program daily even though I do this Agile stuff as well. I have been programming for 25 years and Extreme Programming was the most effective thing for me throughout my career. James: I think XP is the time (now) to have a comeback! 29:41 – Chuck: That was my experience, too. We pushed one team to go to Agile, and then we went to our boss. Chuck: We’d sit down every two weeks and have an Agile-Perspective (what is working and what isn’t working). We are talking about HOW we are writing the software, and that is really what we are after. 30:54 – James: You are building the TEAM that builds the project. Of course, you need to have consistencies across the team, and every team is different b/c every member has different personalities. Mod Programming is we are going to work as a whole group around a screen. Personally, that is not my style but I would TRY it. If it worked for that team then I would do it. 32:00 – Chuck: That is the beauty of it. With this set of programmers x, y, and z may or may not work, and that is O.K. 32:25 – James: I heard about Extreme Programming and I thought it was nuts!! 32:40 – Chuck. 32:44 – James: The more I tried it, and the more it worked. Try Extreme Programming b/c it’s totally a different experience. It’s my book that I wrote 10 years ago but it still is applicable today. Try it for a few months (3 months) or so, b/c it takes time to figure out the different terms and such. Go try out a bunch of new different things, but figuring out HOW to make it work for me. 34:05 – Chuck: Yeah, you need data. Look at the data. Go experiment. 34:47 – James: Try it for real. Check out this essay: “We tried baseball, and it didn’t work.” James: Many things only work in context!  What we do is we change the context in Agile. 35:58 – Chuck: What are you working on now? 36:00 – James: I am actually working on AgileFluency.org. It’s a set of tools for coaches and leaders to CHANGE their context. How can you find those constraints and invest on changing those. 36:31 – Chuck: Where do they go to find you? 36:40 – James: My website - it’s the ugliest website, but it’s been working since 2003. 36:54 – Picks! 37:05 – Fresh Books! END – CacheFly Links: jQuery Angular JavaScript Vue React Slack Zone.js GitHub – Zone.js Chuck’s Twitter Chuck’s E-mail: chuck@devchat.tv Timex Sinclair FidoNet VHDL Book: Java Modeling Color with UML Pivotal Labs Book: The ART OF AGILE DEVELOPMENT BY JAMES SHORE James Shore’s Website Sponsors: Get A Coder Job Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Chuck Podcast: MFCEO James Package Management Tool: Nix.org

art google apple change team color panel kickstarter trash dungeons and dragons ebooks sort personally dungeons react slack agile grandpa github javascript 2k xp nix advertisement vue utf angular freshbooks jquery uml extreme programming cachefly mfceo pivotal labs dragons d charles max wood james it james you matchtype james shore james yeah fidonet chuck it agile fluency james there james going chuck yeah vhdl timex sinclair chuck you chuck how activetab my angular story get a coder job chuck where peter coad chuck welcome rational rose object modeling james have java modeling color uml enterprise consulting credentials james many 252bslack podcast mfceo
Surf-VHDL Podcast
#11-aggaciamento

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2018 9:40


Riprendiamo il discorso di ieri e vediamo un esempio pratico di codice VHDL per collegare i componenti all’interno di una entitàlink alle immagini sul canale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/33Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#10-Jeeg robot d’acciaio

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2018 6:47


Prepariamoci a lanciare i componenti...link alle immagini sul canale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/29File di esempio da scaricarehttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/30Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#Q&A-1-linguaggio di programmazione vs VHDL

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2018 12:24


Iniziamo l'esperimento della rubrica Q&A dove risponderò alle vostre domande con un mini-podcast dedicato.In questa prima puntata risponderò alla domanda di Daniele Di MauroSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlSitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/Effetti sonori:https://freesound.org/people/JustinBW/https://freesound.org/people/Kinoton/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#9-concorrenza

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2018 8:08


Oggi è tosta, quando si parla di concorrenza è sempre tosta. Però non è la concorrenza che stai immaginando. Non si tratta di negozi, vendite o cose simili... scopriamo in concetto di concorrenza in VHDL in questa puntatalink alle figure sul canale Telegram:http://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/25Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#7-e poi come lo provo?

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2018 10:43


“Non funziona mai niente e quando funziona è perché non lo abbiamo controllato abbastanza"In ricordo del mio collega VincenzoSitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdl

provo vhdl comcanale
Surf-VHDL Podcast
#6-logiche maschili femminili e orologi

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2018 8:15


Surf-VHDL Podcast è il primo podcast italiano e attualmente anche mondiale che parla di progettazione hardware in VHDL.Anche nell'elettronica digitale possiamo trovare logiche maschili e femminili. Le maschili ovviamente sono quelle più semplici e lineari, c'era bisogno di dirlo ? :)Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: @francesco_surfvhdl

anche fpga orologi vhdl comcanale surf vhdl podcast
Surf-VHDL Podcast
#5-anche l’idraulico è un progettista digitale

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2018 5:55


Surf-VHDL Podcast è il primo podcast italiano e attualmente anche mondiale che parla di progettazione hardware in VHDL.In questa puntata vedremo come anche l'idraulico può implementare una logica digitalelink alle immaginihttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/14Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: @francesco_surfvhdl

digitale anche fpga vhdl progettista comcanale surf vhdl podcast
Surf-VHDL Podcast
#4-basta poco per potere fare grandi cose

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2018 7:20


Surf-VHDL Podcast è il primo podcast italiano e attualmente anche mondiale che parla di progettazione hardware in VHDL.Spesso crediamo che per realizzare progetti anche complessi dobbiamo fare cose complesse o sapere chissà quali grandi verità. Scopriamo perché forse non è proprio cosìSitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdl

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#3-elettronica digitale e squadre di calcio

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2018 8:06


Surf-VHDL Podcast è il primo podcast italiano e attualmente anche mondiale che parla di progettazione hardware in VHDL.Cosa hanno in comune le squadre di calcio e l'elettronica digitale? Scopriamolo insieme in questo episodioPer seguire meglio questa puntata, qui trovi il riferimento da seguire sul canale telegramt.me/SurfVHDLPodcast/9Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdl

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#2-le interfacce sono importanti

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2018 9:06


Surf-VHDL Podcast è il primo podcast italiano e attualmente anche mondiale che parla di progettazione hardware in VHDL.Iniziamo ad introdurre i concetti di gerarchia nella progettazione hardwareSitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdl

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#1-I tre segreti che nessun progettista mai ti svelerà

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2018 6:20


Surf-VHDL Podcast è il primo podcast italiano e attualmente anche mondiale che parla di progettazione hardware in VHDL.Scopriamo insieme le basi per una corretta progettazione hardware... non soloMi puoi trovare:Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: @francesco_surfvhdlIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Surf-VHDL Podcast
#0-perché un podcast sul VHDL

Surf-VHDL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2018 9:15


Surf-VHDL Podcast è il primo podcast italiano e attualmente anche mondiale che parla di progettazione hardware in VHDL.Perché un podcast sul VHDL? Ma sopratutto, cosa è il VHDL?Sitohttps://surf-vhdl.comCanale telegramhttps://t.me/SurfVHDLPodcastSe vuoi contattarmi per suggerimenti o chiarimentimail: podcast@surf-vhdl.comTelegram: https://t.me/francesco_surfvhdlDi seguito il link ai podcast che ho suggerito:Strategia Digitalehttps://www.spreaker.com/show/strategia-digitalePassione Podcasthttps://www.spreaker.com/show/passione-podcastWe are makershttps://www.spreaker.com/show/we-are-makersDDMfotografiahttps://www.spreaker.com/show/ddmfotografiaIl brano Atmospheria è di Francis Preve - https://www.francispreve.com/

Modellansatz
FPGA Seitenkanäle

Modellansatz

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2018 54:10


Vom 10. - 13. Mai 2018 fand im ZKM und in der Hochschule für Gestaltung (HfG) die GPN18 statt. Dort traf sich Sebastian mit Dennis Gnad, um mit ihm über Seitenangriffe auf Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA) zu sprechen. FPGAs sind veränderliche Computerchips, die hervorragend bei der Entwicklung von logischen Schaltkreisen oder spezieller Glue Logic helfen, und kommen inzwischen auch als Rechenbeschleuniger zum Einsatz. Man kann FPGAs als Vorstufe zu Application-Specific Integrated Circuits (ASIC) sehen, auf denen Strukturen noch viel feiner, für höhere Taktraten und sparsamer abgebildet werden können, das Design aber um Größenordnungen teurer ist. Und während einem ASIC die Funktion ab Werk einbelichtet ist, können FPGAs nahezu beliebig oft zur Laufzeit umprogrammiert werden. Wie im Podcast zu digitalen Währungen erwähnt, spielen Graphical Process Units (GPUs), FPGAs und ASICs eine große Rolle bei Kryptowährungen. Hier ist ein einzelner FPGA-Chip beim so genannten Mining meisst nicht schneller als eine GPU, verbrauchen jedoch im Vergleich deutlich weniger Strom. Spezialisierte ASICs hingegen übersteigen in Effizienz und Geschwindigkeit alle anderen Lösungen. FPGAs finden sich aktuell in vielen Consumer-Produkten, wie dem Apple iPhone 7, im Samsung Galaxy S5, Smart-TVs und selbst auch der Pebble Smartwatch. Ihren besonderen Vorteil spielen FPGAs bei der Verarbeitung von großen Datenmengen wie Videodaten aus, da sie in der Parallelisierung nur durch den verfügbaren Platz beschränkt sind. Die Beschreibung von FPGAs und ASICs, oder deren Programmierung, erfolgt eher strukturell in Hardwarebeschreibungssprachen wie Verilog oder VHDL. Diese Beschreibungen unterscheiden sich sehr von imperativen Programmiersprachen, wie sie oft für CPUs oder GPUs verwendet werden. Es werden in logischen oder kombinatorischen Blöcken Daten verarbeitet, die dann in Taktschritten von und in Datenregister übertragen werden. Die erreichbare Taktfrequenz hängt von der Komplexität der kombinatorischen Blöcke ab. Ein Beispiel für logische Blöcke können Soft-Cores sein, wo zukünftige oder nicht mehr erhältliche CPU-Designs in FPGAs zur Evaluation oder Rekonstruktion abgebildet werden. Eine Variante ist die Entwicklung in OpenCL, wo verschiedene Architekturen wie GPUs, CPUs und FPGA unterstützt werden. Für die effiziente Umsetzung ist dafür weiterhin großes Hardwarewissen erforderlich, und man kann nicht erwarten, dass Code für FPGAs ebenso auf GPU, oder umgekehrt CPU-Code in FPGAs darstellbar ist. Das Interesse von Dennis Gnad liegt bei den FPGAs darin, deren Daten, Logik oder Inhalte durch Seitenkanalangriffe in von den Entwicklern unvorhergesehener Art und Weise auszulesen. Ein Beispiel ist das Erkennen von Fernsehsendungen aus dem Stromverbrauch des Fernsehgeräts wie es auch schon im Podcast zu Smart Metern beschrieben wurde. Ebenso wurden schon Kryptoschlüssel aus Geräuschen einer CPU bestimmt. Mit Soundkarten kann man Funkuhren verstellen und auch Grafikkarten können als UKW-Sender verwendet werden. Die elektromagnetische Abstrahlung ist ein sehr klassischer Seitenkanal und ist als Van-Eck-Phreaking seit 1985 bekannt. Gerade wurden die Timing- und Speculative-Execution-Covered-Channel-Angriffe Spectre und Meltdown für einen großteil aktueller CPUs bekannt, die aktiv Seitenkanäle für verdeckten Informationszugriff nutzen. Normalerweise benötigen Power-Side-Angriffe, die den Stromverbrauch auswerten, physischen Zugang zum Gerät oder der Stromversorgung. Überraschenderweise ist es auf FPGAs hingegen möglich den Stromverbrauch anderer Schaltungsbestandteile rein durch Software zu bestimmen. Dazu werden FPGAs an der Grenze der Timing-Parameter betrieben, und statistisch die erfolgreiche Ausführung gemessen. Mit verschieden langen Pfaden können auch gleichzeitig die Zeitschranken verschieden stark belastet werden und damit gleichzeitig für mehrere Spannungsstufen ausgewertet werden. Damit kann der relative Spannungsverlauf kontinuierlich gemessen werden. Im Zuge seiner Forschung zu Voltage Fluctuations in FPGAs konnte Dennis Gnad die Qualität der Messungen nachweisen. Für die eigentliche Auswertung der Messungen werden hier die Verfahren der Differential Power Analysis verwendet, die nicht absolute Messungen, sondern mit relativen Messungen den Verlauf oder Unterschiede in den Verläufen statistisch analysieren. Speziell wurden mit dem Pearson Korrelations-Koeffizient verschiedene Schlüssel-Hypothesen mit modellierten Stromverläufen aufgestellt, um den Suchraum für einen kryptographischen AES-Schlüssel jeweils stückweise einzuschränken. Dafür musste die spezielle AES-Implementation auf dem FPGA bekannt sein, um entsprechende Leakage-Modelle für die Korrelationsauswertung aufstellen zu können. Insgesamt wurde so ein rein software-getriebener Angriff auf FPGAs demonstriert, der ohne sehr aufwändiges Code-Review-Verfahren, dessen Umsetzung bei VHDL ohnehin große Fragen aufwirft, kaum zu entdecken ist. Dennis betreibt die Forschung als Doktorand am Chair of Dependable Nano Computing (CDNC) am Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), deren Forschung besonders auf die Verlässlichkeit und auch der Sicherheit von Computersystemen abzielt. Die Forschungsarbeiten zu Seitenkanälen über den Stromverbrauch haben ebenso Anwendungen für die Zuverlässigkeit von den Systemen, da ebenso mit der Messung auch eine entsprechende Beeinflussung bis zur Erzeugung von Fehlerzuständen möglich wird, wie es von Dennis durch Fehlerzustände in der Stromversorgung zum Neustart von FPGAs demonstriert werden konnte. Mit Stuxnet wurde bekannt, dass auch Industrieanlagen mit Software zerstört werden konnten, es gab aber auch Computermonitore, die kreativ in neue Nutzungszustände gebracht wurden. Literatur und weiterführende Informationen D. Gnad: Seitenkanal-Angriffe innerhalb FPGA-Chips, Vortrag auf der GPN18, Karlsruhe, 2018. F. Schellenberg, D. Gnad, A. Moradi, M. Tahoori: An Inside Job: Remote Power Analysis Attacks on FPGAs, Cryptology ePrint Archive: Report 2018/012, Proceedings of Design, Automation & Test in Europe (DATE), 2018. D. Gnad, F. Oboril, M. Tahoori: Voltage Drop-based Fault Attacks on FPGAs using Valid Bitstreams, International Conference on Field-Programmable Logic and Applications (FPL), Belgium, 2017. A. Moradi, F.-X. Standaert: Moments-Correlating DPA, Cryptology ePrint Archive: Report 2014/409, Theory of Implementations workshop, 2016. P. Kocher, J. Jaffe, B. Jun, et al: Introduction to differential power analysis, J Cryptogr Eng 1: 5, 2011. E. Brier, C. Clavier, F. Olivier: Correlation power analysis with a leakage model, International workshop on cryptographic hardware and embedded systems. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2004. Cryptology ePrint Archive Search Portal Side Channel Cryptanalysis Lounge - Ruhr-Universität Bochum D. Gnad, F. Oboril, S. Kiamehr, M. Tahoori: An Experimental Evaluation and Analysis of Transient Voltage Fluctuations in FPGAs, in IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration Systems (TVLSI), 2018. F. Schellenberg, D. Gnad, A. Moradi, M. Tahoori: Remote Inter-Chip Power Analysis Side-Channel Attacks at Board-Level], In Proceedings of IEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design (ICCAD), USA, 2018. (to appear Nov. '18) J. Krautter, D. Gnad, M. Tahoori: FPGAhammer: Remote Voltage Fault Attacks on Shared FPGAs, suitable for DFA on AES], in IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems (TCHES), Vol.1, No.3, 2018. (to appear Sept. '18)Podcasts A.-L. Baecker, C. Schrimpe: Crypto for the Masses – Grundlagen, Request for Comments, Der RFC Podcast, Folge 15, 2018. M. Lösch, S. Ritterbusch: Smart Meter Gateway, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 135, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2017. S. Ritterbusch, G. Thäter: Digitale Währungen, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 32, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2014. B. Heinz, T. Pritlove: FPGA, CRE: Technik, Kultur, Gesellschaft, Folge 117, Metaebene Personal Media, 2009.GPN18 Special D. Gnad, S. Ritterbusch: FPGA Seitenkanäle, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 177, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2018. http://modellansatz.de/fpga-seitenkanaele B. Sieker, S. Ritterbusch: Flugunfälle, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 175, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2018. http://modellansatz.de/flugunfaelle A. Rick, S. Ritterbusch: Erdbebensicheres Bauen, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 168, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2018. http://modellansatz.de/erdbebensicheres-bauenGPN17 Special Sibyllinische Neuigkeiten: GPN17, Folge 4 im Podcast des CCC Essen, 2017. A. Rick, S. Ritterbusch: Bézier Stabwerke, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 141, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2017. http://modellansatz.de/bezier-stabwerke F. Magin, S. Ritterbusch: Automated Binary Analysis, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 137, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2017. http://modellansatz.de/binary-analyis M. Lösch, S. Ritterbusch: Smart Meter Gateway, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 135, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2017. http://modellansatz.de/smart-meterGPN16 Special A. Krause, S. Ritterbusch: Adiabatische Quantencomputer, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast Folge 105, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2016. http://modellansatz.de/adiabatische-quantencomputer S. Ajuvo, S. Ritterbusch: Finanzen damalsTM, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 97, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2016. http://modellansatz.de/finanzen-damalstm M. Fürst, S. Ritterbusch: Probabilistische Robotik, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 95, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2016. http://modellansatz.de/probabilistische-robotik J. Breitner, S. Ritterbusch: Incredible Proof Machine, Gespräch im Modellansatz Podcast, Folge 78, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2016. http://modellansatz.de/incredible-proof-machine

The Recruiting Animal
Derek Zeller, Corporate Technical Recruiter

The Recruiting Animal

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2018 74:00


@DERDIVER -- LINKEDIN:   Recruiting Background:  Versed in technical terms specific to each industry including but not limited to Microsoft, Oracle, Cisco, Peoplesoft, SAS, SAP and hardware/software engineering positions. Experience recruiting: Software Engineers (C/C++, C#, .net) Systems Admin's, Platforms, SCCM, Linux Unix administrators, embedded & middleware, CDMA, 802.xx ), Systems Engineers ( Physical layer, MAC layer), Hardware Engineers ( ASIC, FPGA, VHDL, Verilog ), RF Network Engineers, Engineering support, Systems Test Engineers, QA engineers (Software and Hardware), Analysts ( financial, business, CM/DM, multiple software packages including SAP, Baun, Peoplesoft.  Clients have included CIA, NGA, NRO, DoD, DHS, EOP, NOAA, DoS and DOE. Virtual Sourcing and Recruiting Techniques with cold calling, database,and Boolean Internet searches.  

STEM on FIRE
2: Computer Engineering – Aaron Hartwig a recent computer engineering graduate

STEM on FIRE

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2017 17:57


Aaron Hartwig is a recent Computer Engineering graduate working at GE Healthcare in the Computed Tomography (CT) Group doing Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) design using the VHDL language. Aaron did not write any code until college but found his passion through various courses in college. Free Audio Book from Audible: www.stemonfirebook.com Free Audio Book from Audible

CppCast
GCC Compiler Development with Krister Walfridsson

CppCast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2017 51:47


Rob and Jason are joined by Krister Walfridsson to talk about some of his contributions to GCC. Krister got introduced to low-level programming by the C64/Amiga demo scene in the 80s. This led to an interest in operating systems and compilers, and he has been involved in the NetBSD and GCC projects for more than 20 years. His career has been split between OS-level development on embedded platforms and compiler development, and he most enjoys working with "strange" custom-made architectu News libq Metaclasses: Thoughts on generative C++ 6 Reasons Why We Distribute C++ Libraries as Source Code Undefined Behavior in 2017 Patrice Roy @kwalfridsson Krister Walfridsson's Blog Links Why volatile is hard to specify and implement Branch prediction Designing a CPU in VHDL, Part 1: Rationale, tools, methods Sponsors Backtrace Hosts @robwirving @lefticus  

CodeNewbie
Ep. 133 - Building Robot Vacuum Cleaners: An Intro to Embedded Systems (Chris Svec)

CodeNewbie

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2017 54:20


Chris’s job sounds impressive. After over a decade working in tech, he’s designed microprocessors and now helps build robot vacuum cleaners. He’s at the intersection of hardware and software in a space called embedded systems. We explore this field, get a solid intro to working with chips, and discuss the many ways a codenewbie can start learning more about the fascinating world of embedded systems. Show Links Digital Ocean (sponsor) MongoDB (sponsor) Heroku (sponsor) TwilioQuest (sponsor) Arduino Raspberry Pi Hacker News Thermal runaway VHDL nvidia AMD Ringly Roomba logo (programming language) ARM Processors Hardware Description Language Intel Microprocessor Codeland Conf Codeland 2019

Embedded
93: Delicious Gumbo

Embedded

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2015 56:45


The Linker post for this episode is RTOSs and Brownies. Joel Sherrill (@JoelSherrill) spoke with us about real time operating systems, free and open source software, interns, and space. RTEMS home page and wiki Google Summer of Code (the FAQ is the best part!) and ESA Summer of code (awesome tagline: In space no one can hear you code). The LEON is the ESA Sparc core with open source VHDL and extensive use by ESA. Some projects RTEMS is used on include the Magnetosphere Multiscale Mission, theExPRESS Logistics Carrier, Mars Curiosity, and the Dawn spacecraft that is visiting the Ceres asteroid.

FloridaUFOs
Florida UFOs Welcomes Tron

FloridaUFOs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2009 90:00


This Wed at 11pm EST I will welcome Tron,The following is his bio I'm a career military electronics engineer, I work for a major military aerospace engineering company (15,000 employees). I design analog / digital electronics; design computers, and I write software in assembler, 'C', Pascal, BASIC, 'C#', VHDL, etc. I've been investigating ET subjects seriously since 1992, which was fueled by the discovery that my Mother had been an ET abductee in 1965. During these past 17 years, I created a scientific investigative organization, "OSR", staffed it with 15 Ph.D. scientists, psychologists, mathematicians, physicists and award winning news journalists. Courting most of these people from the SETI community. I created a scientific ET search model, of which there are now two models recognized as authentic scientific search for ET: 1) SETI - Search for ET Intelligence, 2) SETV - Search for ET Visitation - my model. See my SETV doctrine website:http://www.setv.org I've designed and hosted numerous scientific field experiments where I 'invited' interactive contact with suspected ET objects, using CSETI style (Steven Greer's) contact protocols. In my later ET contact experiments I designed an experiment platform to acquire scientific grade contact data (no cameras). I used a Remote-Viewer platform 'operator' as PSI beacon to attract alien objects into my experiment-space. Here's are some photos of my ETp contact platform: http://www.setv.org/etp.html#ETP_Platform_Images

HD Diseño Lógico con Quartus II
HDLs con Esquemáticos en Quartus II

HD Diseño Lógico con Quartus II

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 9:36


SD Diseño Lógico con Quartus II
HDLs con Esquemáticos en Quartus II

SD Diseño Lógico con Quartus II

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 9:36