AudiculaPi - the tiny media server for your Raspberry Pi
AudiculaPi - the tiny media / home automation server for your Raspberry Pi 1-2B+
based on OpenWrt/ Chaos Calmer (without RPI3 support)
* Minimalistic system, installed and running on a just 256MB sized SD card
* AudiculaPi provides a detailed Web Browser GUI with multi language support
Already preinstalled:
* Homeautomation with Domoticz (http://www.domoticz.com)
Tested with HW: RFXtrx433E USB 433.92MHz Transceiver by RFXCom and Z-Wave Plus USB Stick ZME_UZB1 by Z-Wave.me
* MPD, Musi Player Daemon - Internet Radio / MP3 /OGG / FLAC etc. player
(with LCD support based on PyDPF)
* pianod
* SAMBA
* SSH/SFTP Server
* MiniDLNA
* Shairport
* Avahi
* OpenVPN
* WebCAM Video Streaming with mjpeg-streamer
* NTP client / server
* WLAN client and / or access point
* ... countless other gadgets, use web based packet manager powered by OpenWrt repository !
Quantum Leaps (QPC) DPP example with LWIP on STM3220G eval board
This is a port of the Dining Philosopher Problem (DPP) using the Quantum Leaps (http://state-machine.com) hierarchical state machine framework with the Light Weight IP (LwIP) network stack (http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/lwip) and an ethernet driver implemented on the STM3220G-eval board (http://www.st.com/internet/evalboard/product/250374.jsp) running on stm32f207 Arm Cortex M3 uProcessor.
The project is eclipse based and uses Code Sourcery cross compiler. See...
nwGTPv2 is free and open source implementation of GPRS Tunneling Protocol version 2 (GTPv2) or Evolved GTP (eGTP). GTPv2 is primarily used for control signalling between Serving Gateway SGW and PDN Gateway (PGW) in Evolved Packet Core (EPC).
nwEPC is a free and open source framework software implementation of SAE/EPC Serving Gateway or SGW and Packet Data Network Gateway or PGW, which is sometimes referred as SAE-Gateway as well.
Deploy in 115+ regions with the modern database for every enterprise.
MongoDB Atlas gives you the freedom to build and run modern applications anywhere—across AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud. With global availability in over 115 regions, Atlas lets you deploy close to your users, meet compliance needs, and scale with confidence across any geography.
Simple Lossless Ad-hoc Protocol (SLAP) is designed to be used for wireless digital data transfer on embedded systems. The program is built for uClinux, a derivative of Linux designed for embedded microcontrollers, but can be easily ported.