Date: Tuesday October 8th, 2024
Start Time: 9:30am - 12:30pm Central Time
Where: Room 9A Convention Center, Austin, Texas
Duration: Three hours
Cost to attend: $30 US
Embedded software developers are being asked to design increasingly complex software solutions, on higher-speed buses across multiple architectures, with smaller teams and shorter times to market. The complexity challenge is increasing while the development time and resources are decreasing.
This 3-hour hands-on workshop will introduce attendees to ADI’s solutions that address this complexity challenge, based on open-source tooling (GCC, GNU build tools), ecosystems (Zephyr, etc.), and config and debug tooling (VS Code, etc.).
You’ll receive a MAX32690-based development platform, which is yours to keep. This Arduino form-factor kit includes a HW debugger, and a high-performance MEMs accelerometer breakout to sample data from.
Who should attend? This workshop is led by a pair of experts who will combine lecture with one-on-one instruction. It is aimed at mid-level or higher software engineers who are familiar with embedded development on MCUs, with some experience with C and basic HW debugging (single-stepping through code, etc.).
Analog Devices will provide each attendee with a preconfigured laptop to use during the workshop, but you may want to bring your own laptop to take notes.
Agenda
Introduction (5 mins)
Presentation: Basics of the MAX32690-based development platform (25 mins)
Hands-on lab time (50 mins)
Break (15 mins)
Zephyr presentation (25 mins)
Hands-on lab time (50 mins)
Wrap up (10 mins)
Duration
3 hours
Price
$30.00
Language
English
OPEN TO
Open to developers on a first come, first served basis, up to 50 registrants. We have the right to refuse participation after registration and payment is received and a credit will be given. THE CLASS WILL SELL OUT!!
Maureen Helm is a Distinguished Engineer in the Software and Security Solutions Group focusing on embedded microcontroller software. She is an upstream maintainer in the Zephyr Project and former chair of the Technical Steering Committee.
Kevin is a Distinguished Engineer and Tools Architect in the Software and Security Group focusing on improving the software design, development and debug process. He’s actively involved in open-source hardware and software communities, with a...