- Galileo is designed to support shields that operate at either 3.3V or 5V.
- The core operating voltage of Galileo is3.3V. However, a jumper on the board enables voltage translation to 5V at the I/O pins.
- This provides support for 5V Uno shields and is the default behavior.
- Galileo is a microcontroller board based on the Intel® Quark SoC X1000 Application Processor, a 32-bit Intel Pentium®-class system on a chip (SoC).
- PC industry standard I/O ports and features to expand native usage and capabilities beyond the Arduino shield ecosystem
- A full sized mini-PCI Express slot, 100Mb Ethernet port, Micro-SD slot, RS-232 serial port, USB Host port, USB Client Port, and 8 MByte NOR flash come standard on the board.
Sunday, July 13, 2014
Intel GALILEO Microcontroller board
Intel GALILEO Single ATX DDR2 1066 Microcontroller Motherboard GALILEO1.Y
Saturday, July 12, 2014
Intel Galileo lab video playlist
Video include:
- Galileo as an Arduino compatible board
- Galileo as a linux server
- access GPIO from linux
- LedSensor in Arduino sketch
- LedSensor in shell
- LedSensor in C
- NodeJS
- Servo Motors
Friday, July 11, 2014
Beginning NFC with PhoneGap and Arduino - O'Reilly Webcast
Beginning NFC with PhoneGap and Arduino - O'Reilly Webcast
Originally recorded April 29, 2014. Don Coleman, Tom Igoe, and Brian Jepson (authors of Beginning NFC ) will introduce you to Near Field Communication using Android phones, Arduino, and NFC readers for computers and Arduino. Learn how information on NFC tags is stored and retrieved, how to write applications on Arduino and Android to read and write tags, and how to integrate NFC into larger projects.
Two demos in this session will feature :
- Reading a tag with an Android PhoneGap application
- Writing to a tag from Arduino
- And when both are done, we'll be able to show you how an Android device can read the tag you wrote from Arduino and take an action based on the data you stored.
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