Inertial navigation peripheral/82708: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
m (Olin university chapter/OLPC peripheral development/82708 moved to Inertial navigation peripheral/82708) |
(No difference)
|
Latest revision as of 17:13, 16 October 2008
ISS - OLPC Peripheral Dev
8/27/08 nlee: documentation = good! Need has documentation to pass
nlee: talked to Oscar - he says OK as advisor, but needs a good course proposal. When are we going to meet? How often? Frequency of design reviews? At least 30 minutes a week.
objectives of class:
- Significant work done on some meaningful "aka useful" (nontrivial) peripherals for the XO
- Well documented
- enough that if we don't finish, someone outside could pick it up and continue working on it.
- self explanatory documentation
- implied - anything made is released open-source
- most restrictive CC license is fine
goals
- finished product
- working prototype
- breadboard (minimum)
- pcb (stretch)
- something cheaply bagged in kit-form for kiddies with soldering irons (stretch stretch goal!)
- discussion: question as to the value of premade circuit boards
- clarification: something cheap and easy to reproduce, basically
learning objectives
- Competencies
- Communication = documentation
- Design
- Timescale
- Dev first, then document?
- No, do simultaneously
- Timescale
- Context
- "Olin graduates will demonstrate knowledge of the ethical, professional, business, social, and cultural contexts of engineering, and the ability to articulate their own professional and ethical responsibilities."
- Lifelong learning
- STU course - independent research
other
- Jay suggests trying to front-load this class -- work harder early in the semester, saves pwnage from finals/projects
- 4 hrs/wk initially
grading
- 50% design review
- break down into
- functional prototype, etc
- break down into
- 50% documentation
Planning
- groups
- timescale
- design review every two weeks
- universities list note: documentation -- keep in contact about list for "ip restrictions at university"
- issues that may arise as stuff that may be done for a class -- release of own work, for example