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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Zephyr Project
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240910T083000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240910T153000
DTSTAMP:20260414T234633
CREATED:20240816T134452Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240816T134632Z
UID:10000107-1725957000-1725982200@www.zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr® OS on MCUs: Linux for Micros? | Maidenhead
DESCRIPTION:While Linux has long been predominant in microprocessor (MPUs) based embedded systems\, the availability of operating systems for microcontrollers (MCUs) is quite fragmented. Microcontroller manufacturers sometimes have their proprietary offerings\, and FreeRTOS has existed for many years. However\, not much provides a feature set that is even close to Linux. \nMeanwhile\, Zephyr® OS has become an option. Semiconductor companies are spending a lot of money and effort to have some of their current microcontroller generations supported by Zephyr. Together with NXP Semiconductors\, we would like to invite you to a full-day seminar to discuss Zephyr\, what it can do\, and how it looks and feels on NXPs’ most recent microcontroller family\, MCX through hands-on LABs. \nThe seminar will cover “traditional MCU development\,” which is done by small software teams\, usually with the software stack of the MCU supplier. New technologies and the growing complexity of the system context push this model to its limits. \n\n  \nAgenda: \n\n08:30 – Registration / Coffee\n09:00 – Welcome and Introduction to NXP MCU Portfolio\n09:45 – Zephyr® OS\n\nIntroduction\nWhy Zephyr®?\nCoffee break\nZephyr® Ecosystem (Support for ARM Cores\, RISC-V\, etc.)\nLVGL GUI Demo RT1060\nArdunio SIMCom Demo\n\n\n12:00 – Lunch Break\n13:00 – Zephyr® Hands-on LABS using NXP FRDM-MCXN947\n\nHello World: Import Sample\, Build\, Debug\nKconfig: Explore and Modify Kconfigs\, Guiconfig Tool\nDebugging with VS Code: Thread Awareness\, Stack Usage\, Thread Call Stack\nDevicetree: MCUXpresso Device Tree Viewer\, Board Overlay Files\, Modifying Hardware Configuration\n\n\n15:00 – Wrap Up / Q&A\n\n  \nNew MCU projects must keep up with the increased hardware\, software\, and protocol complexity. Connecting the system to the Internet introduces another order of magnitude in complexity\, as plans for security updates must be considered from the start. \nMustering these challenges in the confines of a software stack originally written by hardware vendors to get users started becomes almost impossible. A larger developer base can share the maintenance load of the “common infrastructure\,” freeing developers to concentrate on the features which differentiate their products against the competition. The Free and Open-Source approach is a perfect match for this new landscape. \nThe cross-architecture\, vendor-neutral\, and permissively licensed Zephyr® OS is introduced to show how it can help development teams concentrate on product features instead of invisible (yet important!) infrastructure. \nRegister here.
URL:https://www.zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-os-on-mcus-linux-for-micros-maidenhead/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240912T083000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240912T153000
DTSTAMP:20260414T234633
CREATED:20240816T134902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240816T134902Z
UID:10000108-1726129800-1726155000@www.zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr® OS on MCUs: Linux for Micros? | Bolton
DESCRIPTION:While Linux has long been predominant in microprocessor (MPUs) based embedded systems\, the availability of operating systems for microcontrollers (MCUs) is quite fragmented. Microcontroller manufacturers sometimes have their proprietary offerings\, and FreeRTOS has existed for many years. However\, not much provides a feature set that is even close to Linux. \nMeanwhile\, Zephyr® OS has become an option. Semiconductor companies are spending a lot of money and effort to have some of their current microcontroller generations supported by Zephyr. Together with NXP Semiconductors\, we would like to invite you to a full-day seminar to discuss Zephyr\, what it can do\, and how it looks and feels on NXPs’ most recent microcontroller family\, MCX through hands-on LABs. \nThe seminar will cover “traditional MCU development\,” which is done by small software teams\, usually with the software stack of the MCU supplier. New technologies and the growing complexity of the system context push this model to its limits. \n\n  \nAgenda: \n\n08:30 – Registration / Coffee\n09:00 – Welcome and Introduction to NXP MCU Portfolio\n09:45 – Zephyr® OS\n\nIntroduction\nWhy Zephyr®?\nCoffee break\nZephyr® Ecosystem (Support for ARM Cores\, RISC-V\, etc.)\nLVGL GUI Demo RT1060\nArdunio SIMCom Demo\n\n\n12:00 – Lunch Break\n13:00 – Zephyr® Hands-on LABS using NXP FRDM-MCXN947\n\nHello World: Import Sample\, Build\, Debug\nKconfig: Explore and Modify Kconfigs\, Guiconfig Tool\nDebugging with VS Code: Thread Awareness\, Stack Usage\, Thread Call Stack\nDevicetree: MCUXpresso Device Tree Viewer\, Board Overlay Files\, Modifying Hardware Configuration\n\n\n15:00 – Wrap Up / Q&A\n\n  \nNew MCU projects must keep up with the increased hardware\, software\, and protocol complexity. Connecting the system to the Internet introduces another order of magnitude in complexity\, as plans for security updates must be considered from the start. \nMustering these challenges in the confines of a software stack originally written by hardware vendors to get users started becomes almost impossible. A larger developer base can share the maintenance load of the “common infrastructure\,” freeing developers to concentrate on the features which differentiate their products against the competition. The Free and Open-Source approach is a perfect match for this new landscape. \nThe cross-architecture\, vendor-neutral\, and permissively licensed Zephyr® OS is introduced to show how it can help development teams concentrate on product features instead of invisible (yet important!) infrastructure. \nPlease register on the link here.
URL:https://www.zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-os-on-mcus-linux-for-micros-bolton/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240916
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240920
DTSTAMP:20260414T234633
CREATED:20240726T024228Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240726T024228Z
UID:10000103-1726444800-1726790399@www.zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Open Source Summit Europe (Vienna\, Austria)
DESCRIPTION:The Open Source Summit Europe\, which takes place on September 16-18 in Vienna\, Austria\, is packed with technical content. It is the premier event for open source developers\, technologists\, and community leaders to collaborate\, share information\, solve problems\, and gain knowledge\, furthering open source innovation and ensuring a sustainable open source ecosystem. \nAs a conference umbrella\, Open Source Summit is composed of a collection of microconferences covering the most important technologies\, topics\, and issues affecting open source today. Zephyr will be featured as a microconference. Check out the schedule below. \nMonday\, September 16\n15:25 CEST: Bringing Existing Open-Source Code into MISRA Compliance – Roberto Bagnara\, University of Parma and BUGSENG – Roberto Bagnara\, Professor at University of Parma and BUGSENG \nBringing an existing codebase into MISRA compliance is known to be a difficult\, risky and time-consuming task. Yet\, when a product needs a functional safety certification and rewriting the software is out of question\, this is a necessity. Such an endeavor requires facing multiple tradeoffs and\, consequently\, lots of experience both on the codebase and on MISRA. The choices between deviating the guideline\, and the (often\, many) ways in which code may be changed and deviations may be formulated\, are tough and with consequences that are not immediately evident. The situation is particularly interesting in the case of open-source software\, where additional challenges have to be faced. In this presentation\, we illustrate our experience and the several lessons learned while undertaking MISRA compliance work in open-source projects\, most notably the Zephyr RTOS and the Xen hypervisor\, both used in many embedded systems. Key take-home points include: effective deviation strategies and mechanisms; dealing with the MISRA C essential type model (guidelines related to that account for many of the violations in existing codebases); interaction with open-source communities. \nTuesday\, September 17:\n9 am CEST: How to Contribute a Zephyr Sensor Driver – Maureen Helm\,  Distinguished Engineer at Analog Devices \nThe Zephyr sensor driver API is a popular area for new contributors to submit code upstream; a sensor driver is well-contained\, it doesn’t touch more intimidating or complex subsystems\, and most importantly\, it enables your Zephyr application to interact with the physical world in a new way. Naturally\, you want to share it with the open source community\, but how do you do it? This talk will share best practices and common pitfalls encountered by new contributors submitting their first sensor driver\, and provide insight into why maintainers request certain changes. \n09:50 CEST: Zephyr Build System: Sysbuild and New Hardware Model – Torsten Tejlmand Rasmussen\, Open Source Software Engineer at Nordic Semiconductor  \nThe Zephyr build system had been reaching its limits in its ability to build multiple images for modern SoCs in its previous hardware model.\nThe original build system began with the concept of a simple board containing a single core SoC for which you would build a single image. In today’s world however\, developers want to build multiple images for boards which may have multiple SoCs and / or SoCs with multiple CPU cores. This evolution towards complexity led us to the development and introduction of sysbuild and a new hardware model in Zephyr. \nThe purpose of this talk is to dive into the new hardware model\, and what it provides seen from a developer’s point of view\, and from there continue into sysbuild\, where the new hardware model is leveraged in order to build multiple images for a single device. The talk will go over how you as a developer can make the best use of the new hardware model and sysbuild to effectively build a complete project. \n11:00 CEST: Secure and Encrypted Boot in Zephyr RTOS – Parthiban N\, Software Engineer at Linumiz \nMCUboot enables secure booting of Zephyr RTOS using asymmetric cryptographic signature verification with a public key. The hash of the public key is embedded or compiled with the MCUboot binary by default\, which is used for checking the integrity of the public key. To tamper-proof\, as an alternate secure boot option\, the hash of the public key can be stored securely and retrieved when hardware keys are enabled. Security of embedded SoC’s (e.g.\, i.MX RT) offers more capabilities\, such as High Assurance Boot (HAB)\, Data Co-Processor (DCP)\, or Trusted Firmware-M (TF-M) implementing the Trustzone for SoC’s (e.g.\, nRF91) to enable secure storage with hardware crypto acceleration or external security modules (e.g.\, TPM\, EdegeLock) to store keys in hardware vaults. \nThis talk will detail MCUboot secure booting with hardware keys. NXP i.MX RT as an example using HAB for booting singed and encrypted bootloader MCUboot\, enabling hardware root of trust\, and booting Zephyr RTOS using keys from OTP for verification. We will also see about using the TF-M backend and OTP for secure booting Trustzone-enabled SoCs. \n11:20 CEST: Zephyr Network Subsystem Status and Overview – Jukka Rissanen\, Principal Engineer at Nordic Semiconductor \nNetwork connectivity is important part of Zephyr. This talk will give information of current status of the network stack. \n11:55 CEST: Lightning Talk: The CFU: Custom Hardware with RISCV and Zephyr – Mohammed Billoo\, CEO at MAB Labs Embedded Solutions \nRISC-V’s instruction set architecture (ISA) has enabled seasoned embedded software engineers to experiment with FPGAs since numerous open-source RISC-V cores can be flashed onto an FPGA. \nThe Zephyr Project is rapidly emerging as a leading real-time operating system (RTOS). Zephyr integrates open-source and security best practices to ensure a vendor-neutral\, secure\, and reliable platform. \nOne of the exciting features of the RISCV ISA is the Custom Function Unit (CFU)\, which enables a framework to support custom operations in hardware\, which is accessible from software. In this talk\, Mohammed will demonstrate how to add a CFU into a RISCV core on an FPGA\, and how to make the appropriate calls from Zephyr. \n12:05 CEST Lightning Talk: Zephyr Portability with an AI Application on Very Different MCUs – Ales Ryska\, Systems Engineer at NXP \nCode portability is one of the compelling benefits of adopting Zephyr. In this session we will discuss a single AI-based face detection application that scales from a high performance\, Arm Cortex-M7 based MCU to a low power Cortex-M33 based MCU with a neural processing accelerator. In addition to different main processor cores\, these two platforms have quite different camera and display interfaces\, and one has a limited frame buffer capability\, leading to required improvements in the display driver which NXP has contributed back to the project. This session will also explore the specifics of how devicetree and Kconfig were leveraged to switch between platforms. \n12:15 CEST: Lightning Talk: Using Zephyr to Power the Sustainable Cloud – Dan Kalowsky\, Firmware Engineer at Ampere Computing \nShare how Ampere Computing uses Zephyr to re-imagine the cloud in a more sustainable way. Covering some of the challenges encountered aligning product goals with Zephyr\, adding new code coverage beyond the upstream support\, and getting a test environments up and running. \n12:25 CEST: Lightning Talk: Implementing the Precision Time Protocol (PTP) in the Zephyr Project – Adam Wojasiński\, Software Engineer at BayLibre \nIn order for highly distributed communication to function well\, there must be a reliable time source and a way to synchronize time between devices. In applications such as automotive and industrial control\, the requirements here can be strict and subject to regulatory constraints. Precision Time Protocol (PTP) is a response to these hard time synchronization requirements by achieving clock accuracy in the sub-microsecond range. \nAs Zephyr becomes more broadly used in these environments\, it needs support for precision timekeeping. This talk will cover a brief overview of PTP\, discussion of various implementation choices for Zephyr\, challenges along the way and upstreaming plans. \n14:00 CEST: Developing Wildlife Camera Traps with Zephyr RTOS – Alex Bucknall\, Software Engineer at Arribada Initiative \nMonitoring wildlife and environmental changes often requires deploying remote camera traps that can capture imagery and activity over long periods of time. These camera systems need to be low-power\, portable\, and easily adapted to different hardware configurations based on project requirements. \nThis talk will cover how we utilised Zephyr to develop flexible time lapse camera solutions for conservation applications. We’ll explore our time lapse camera deployment in Bermuda and how we’re using Zephyr to monitor and understand the impact of seagrass decay on the local marine life. Zephyr allowed us to rapidly target different hardware platforms by abstracting away complex hardware interactions. We’ll discuss how Zephyr’s hardware and driver APIs simplify peripheral access to cameras\, RTCs\, and power management features across multiple vendor SoCs. \nAdditionally\, we’ll explore challenges associated with this kind of cross-platform support\, such as lack of core features for certain vendor SoCs. We’ll also share insights into optimising for size\, performance\, and battery life on constrained embedded devices. \n14:20 CEST: Exploring the Potential of Zephyr in Automotive and Software Defined Vehicles – Philipp Ahmann\, Sr. OSS Community Manager at Etas  GmbH (BOSCH) \nIn the automotive industry more than 100 embedded control units (ECUs) are present in a typical car. They are equipped with microcontrollers responsible for various peripherals within the vehicle. Although it may be challenging to adapt automotive-specific interfaces to an IoT-driven RTOS like Zephyr\, the use of standard peripherals such as GPIOs\, I2C\, and UART can lead to significant synergies with other products. \nHowever\, as starting point\, the talk will delve into the automotive specific requirements and technology stacks necessary for integrating Zephyr into automotive development. Additionally\, it will highlight areas where Zephyr may not yet be a perfect fit for automotive applications. Key touchpoints for discussion will include the compatibility of Zephyr with established automotive standards like Autosar\, COVESA VSS\, and CAN stack. Furthermore\, the talk will address the challenges related to process compliance and adherence to safety integrity standards in the automotive industry. \nThis talk aims to initiate a discussion on the potential wider adoption of Zephyr in automotive products and to foster an engaging discussion among industry professionals. \n14:55 CEST: Lightning Talk: Open Source Fleet Management in Zephyr – Maciej Sobkowski\, Software Engineer at Antmicro \nComplex\, real-life embedded system deployments often consist of multiple SoCs/MCUs running a mix of OSes\, ranging from user-facing high-end nodes based on Linux/Android to MCUs dedicated to controlling specific low-level functions of the device\, using an RTOS like Zephyr. Over-the-air updates for such systems poses a challenge\, as the firmware needs to be updated in a safe & coordinated way. \nRemote Device Fleet Manager is a permissively licensed\, fully open source and self-hostable framework for modular\, configurable OTA updates\, fleet management and ML data management that supports Linux\, Android\, and\, since recently\, also Zephyr-based platforms. \nThis talk will delve into how RDFM was extended to support Zephyr-based systems\, the motivations and considerations of the development and some interesting use cases it enables. RDFM allows for fully redundant updates\, incl. rollback to the previous version\, grouped device updates and mixed OS deployments. \nTo enable tight interoperability with Zephyr’s ecosystem\, the integration is based on the MCUmgr library\, communicating with Zephyr devices via the SMP protocol. The MCUboot bootloader is used for managing the firmware on the device. \n15:05 CEST: Lightning Talk: Delta Firmware Over The Air (DFOTA) Update: Optimizing Device Updates in Zephyr – Romain Pelletant\, Embedded Software Enginner\, & Clovis Corde\, Embedded Software Engineer at Kickmaker \nFirmware Over The Air (FOTA) updates are a well-established method for updating devices\, but this approach shows its limitations in the embedded world. Indeed\, in embedded systems we have 2 main constraints (among others) when discussing firmware updates : memory and bandwidth. Regarding memory\, developing a low-memory-footprint API was our priority when creating this solution. To explain how we built this API\, we will discuss compression algorithms and justify our choice of implementing in Zephyr the open-source library “Heatshrink” which is ideally suited for DFOTA’s needs and for embedded systems in general (we can demonstrate the memory footprint differences compared to the already implemented compression algorithm “LZ4”). Next\, we will see how deltas (or patches) between two firmware versions are generated (we could present a benchmark to illustrate the data savings achieved by sending patches instead of the full firmware\, as it is done during FOTA update). Further\, we will explore the implementation of the DFOTA API to explain how it works and how it can be implemented into your project. \n15:15 CEST: Lightning Talk: How to Create an Asset Tracker With Zephyr and Thingsboard In No Time – Tobias Marquardt\, Embedded Software Engineer at grandcentrix GmbH \nIn this lightning talk I’ll show you how to create a working PoC of an asset tracker with very little effort by using Zephyr. It’s based on an off-the-shelf cellular SoC that sends GPS data over CoAP to the open source Thingsboard IoT cloud platform. \n15:25 CEST: Lightning Talk: From Ideas to 3 Firmwares Powering Railway-Infrastructure Monitoring in 2 Years – Tobias Meyer\, Software Firmware Developer at Konux GmbH \n\n\nUsing Zephyr OS\, we successfully developed three firmware versions in under two years\, establishing a scalable wireless sensor network for enhanced railway infrastructure monitoring. \nThis talk will detail the rationale behind our technology selections\, including Zephyr OS\, BLE\, LTE-M\, and AWS Iot Core. \nWe will discuss specific features of Zephyr that facilitated rapid development and the aspects that presented a learning curve. Our session will explore critical design decisions\, architectural frameworks using Zephyr\, and effective strategies for MCU communication and optimizing battery life. It will show how projects are setup\, dependency are managed using west\, how firmware is tested\, and which features of zephyr we use where. We’ll also share common pitfalls and practical lessons learned. \nConcluding with recent Zephyr updates and our reflective insights\, this presentation will end with what we would have done differently this time. \n\n\n16:00 CEST: Preparing Zephyr for Safety Element out of Context Certification – Nicole Pappler\, Senior Safety Expert at AlektoMetis.com \nZephyr\, as also other open source projects\, is heading towards functional safety\, to achieve a safety certification as a Safety Element out of Context (SEooC) the question of what this really means comes up quite often. \nThere are usually three stakeholders in a project like project community\, the assessor and the user\, who actually wants to use the certified software \nAs all these parties have different expectations of what this certification will require\, there are a lot of different rumours and opinions out there regarding functional safety certification. This talk will give an introduction to what qualification evidence is usually prepared and assessed for a SEooC certification\, what this means for the project and how it can actually be integrated into a safety relevant software system. \nThis talk will also give an update of the current status of the safety working group\, how to participate and what to expect there. \n16:55 CEST: Level Up Your Embedded Testing Game: FRETish\, Robot\, and Twister: A Dream Team – Christian Schlotter\, Software Architect at Carl Zeiss Meditec AG & Tobias Kästner Bridle Maintainer at TiaC Systems \nDeveloping embedded software for regulated environments like medical devices presents unique challenges. Crucially\, we need to document how the software design fulfills stated product requirements. While functional testing remains dominant for verifying functional suitability\, deriving and maintaining effective test suites can quickly become cumbersome. \nThis talk explores a novel approach to this longstanding problem. We leverage NASA’s FRETish method for formally capturing requirements. We will talk about how the formal nature of FRETish requirements allows for automatic test case generation leveraging the Robot Framework. The latter was specifically chosen as it is partially supported by Zephyr’s test harness today and allows to utilize twister for automated test execution of these test suites on real hardware. This method has the potential to streamline testing\, offering benefits such as reduced time and maintenance efforts as well as accurate coverage metrics from very early on in the project’s lifecycle. \nWe’ll discuss our progress in implementing this approach\, the challenges we encountered\, and potential solutions for deeper integration with the Zephyr project. \n17:45 CEST: Zephyr LPWAN: Connectivity Options and When to Choose Them – Jordan Yates\, Co-Founder and Head of Engineering at Embeint \nDevelopers are spoiled for choice when it comes to Low-Power Wide-Area-Network technologies\, which can make it difficult to choose where to focus your time when starting a project. \nIn this session we will run through the advantages and tradeoffs of the various LPWAN solutions that Zephyr supports out of the box\, with respect to power consumption\, range\, reachability and more.\nTechnologies to discuss include Bluetooth\, WiFi\, LTE CAT-M1\, LTE NB-IoT\, LoRa/LoRaWAN and Thread. \nThursday\, September 19\n9-12:30 CEST: Zephyr Workshop (Additional Fee\, pre-registration required) \nRegistration Cost: $10 \nThe Zephyr Workshop\, sponsored by Infineon\, is designed to introduce you to the leading Open Source RTOS built with safety and security in mind. Attendees will learn why Zephyr is gaining the attention of developers and product makers. This session will provide a general overview of the Zephyr OS along with an overview of how to begin building Bluetooth® Low Energy applications using Zephyr RTOS. \nThe hands-on portion of the session will feature the building of two connected applications using Infineon’s AIROC™ CYW20829 Bluetooth® LE MCU Evaluation Kit: \n\nSensor to Phone application – For this hands-on application\, attendees will program a Bluetooth LE peripheral Zephyr application on the AIROC CYW20829 evaluation kit and connect it to a phone running the AIROC™ Bluetooth® Connect App.\nPeriodic Advertising with Responses (PAwR) application – For this hands-on application\, attendees will program a PAwR Zephyr application on the AIROC CYW20829 evaluation kit. Each participant will communicate with a central node and see how a “many to one” Bluetooth LE network can be created.\n\n** Notes: \n\nParticipants will use their own machines for the hands-on portion\, and they will get to walk away with the Infineon AIROC CYW20829 Bluetooth LE 5.4 MCU Evaluation Kit.\nSome (minimal) pre-work is needed to make the best use of the time allotted. An email will be sent to registrants prior to the event with further instructions.\nSpace is limited to 50 participants.\n\nHow to Register: Pre-registration is required. To register for Zephyr Workshop\, add it to your Open Source Summit Europe registration. \nTo learn more about Open Source Summit\, visit the main event website: https://events.linuxfoundation.org/open-source-summit-europe/.
URL:https://www.zephyrproject.org/event/open-source-summit-europe-vienna-austria/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Speaking,Linux Foundation Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Zephyr-@-OSSummit-EU.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240917T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240917T160000
DTSTAMP:20260414T234633
CREATED:20240912T125059Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240912T125059Z
UID:10000115-1726567200-1726588800@www.zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:NXP I Zephyr OS on MCUs A Linux for Micros? - Leonberg
DESCRIPTION:While Linux is predominant in microprocessor (MPUs) based embedded systems for a long time\, the availability of operating systems for microcontrollers (MCUs) is quite fragmented. Microcontroller manufacturers do have their own proprietary offerings sometimes\, and FreeRTOS is there since many years. But not much provides a feature-set which comes even close to Linux. \nMeanwhile\, Zephyr® OS has become a kind of an option. Big semiconductor powerhouses are spending a lot of money and efforts to have some of their current microcontroller generations supported by Zephyr. \nTogether with NXP Semiconductors we would like to invite you to a half-day seminar\, discussing what Zephyr is\, what it can do and how it looks and feels on NXPs’ most recent microcontroller family\, MCX. We’re looking forward to welcoming you! \n  \nAgenda: \n10:30 Registration \n11:00 Opening – EBV intro \n11:10 Tradicional MCU Development \nShift happens \nIntroducing Zephyr \n13:00 Lunck break \n14:00 NXP MCX Microcontrollers Overview \n15:00 Zephyr on MCX \n16:00 Closing \nNew MCU projects have to keep up with the increased complexity of hardware\, software\, and protocols. Connecting the system to the Internet introduces another order of magnitude in complexity\, as plans for security updates have to be considered from the start. \nMustering these challenges in the confines of a software stack originally written by hardware vendors to get users started becomes almost impossible. A larger developer base can share the maintenance load of the “common infrastructure\,” freeing developers to concentrate on the features discriminating the products against the competition. The Free and Open-Source approach is a perfect match for this new landscape. \nThe cross-architecture\, vendor-neutral\, and permissively licensed Zephyr® OS is introduced to show how it can help development teams concentrate on product features instead of invisible (yet important!) infrastructure. \nPlease register on the link below. We’re looking forward to welcoming you! \n  \nDate and Location: \n17. September 2024\,\nNeue Ramtelstraße 4\n71229 Leonberg\nGermany \n  \nRegister here.
URL:https://www.zephyrproject.org/event/nxp-i-zephyr-os-on-mcus-a-linux-for-micros-leonberg/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240919
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240920
DTSTAMP:20260414T234633
CREATED:20240726T025420Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240726T025420Z
UID:10000104-1726704000-1726790399@www.zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr Workshop (Vienna\, Austria)
DESCRIPTION:The Zephyr Workshop\, happening Thursday\, September 19 from 9 am -12:30 pm at Open Source Summit Europe\, is designed to introduce you to the leading Open Source RTOS built with safety and security in mind. Attendees will learn why Zephyr is gaining the attention of developers and product makers. Sponsored by Infineon\, this session will provide a general overview of the Zephyr OS along with an overview of how to begin building Bluetooth® Low Energy applications using Zephyr RTOS. \nThe hands-on portion of the session will feature the building of two connected applications using Infineon’s AIROC™ CYW20829 Bluetooth® LE MCU Evaluation Kit: \n\nSensor to Phone application – For this hands-on application\, attendees will program a Bluetooth LE peripheral Zephyr application on the AIROC CYW20829 evaluation kit and connect it to a phone running the AIROC™ Bluetooth® Connect App.\nPeriodic Advertising with Responses (PAwR) application – For this hands-on application\, attendees will program a PAwR Zephyr application on the AIROC CYW20829 evaluation kit. Each participant will communicate with a central node and see how a “many to one” Bluetooth LE network can be created.\n\n** Notes: \n\nParticipants will use their own machines for the hands-on portion\, and they will get to walk away with the Infineon AIROC CYW20829 Bluetooth LE 5.4 MCU Evaluation Kit.\nSome (minimal) pre-work is needed to make the best use of the time allotted. An email will be sent to registrants prior to the event with further instructions.\nSpace is limited to 50 participants.\n\nPre-registration is required. Registration cost is $10. To register for Zephyr Workshop\, add it to your Open Source Summit Europe registration.
URL:https://www.zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-workshop-vienna-austria/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Zephyr-workshop.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240919T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240919T160000
DTSTAMP:20260414T234633
CREATED:20240912T130350Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240912T130350Z
UID:10000116-1726740000-1726761600@www.zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:NXP I Zephyr OS on MCUs A Linux for Micros? - Poing\, Germany
DESCRIPTION:While Linux is predominant in microprocessor (MPUs) based embedded systems for a long time\, the availability of operating systems for microcontrollers (MCUs) is quite fragmented. Microcontroller manufacturers do have their own proprietary offerings sometimes\, and FreeRTOS is there since many years. But not much provides a feature-set which comes even close to Linux. \nMeanwhile\, Zephyr® OS has become a kind of an option. Big semiconductor powerhouses are spending a lot of money and efforts to have some of their current microcontroller generations supported by Zephyr. \nTogether with NXP Semiconductors we would like to invite you to a half-day seminar\, discussing what Zephyr is\, what it can do and how it looks and feels on NXPs’ most recent microcontroller family\, MCX. We’re looking forward to welcoming you! \n\nAgenda: \n\n10:30 Registration\n11:00 Opening – EBV intro\n11:10 Tradicional MCU Development\n\nShift happens\nIntroducing Zephyr\n\n\n13:00 Lunck break\n14:00 NXP MCX Microcontrollers Overview\n15:00 Zephyr on MCX\n16:00 Closing\n\nNew MCU projects have to keep up with the increased complexity of hardware\, software\, and protocols. Connecting the system to the Internet introduces another order of magnitude in complexity\, as plans for security updates have to be considered from the start.Mustering these challenges in the confines of a software stack originally written by hardware vendors to get users started becomes almost impossible. A larger developer base can share the maintenance load of the “common infrastructure\,” freeing developers to concentrate on the features discriminating the products against the competition. The Free and Open-Source approach is a perfect match for this new landscape.The cross-architecture\, vendor-neutral\, and permissively licensed Zephyr® OS is introduced to show how it can help development teams concentrate on product features instead of invisible (yet important!) infrastructure.Please register on the link below. We’re looking forward to welcoming you! \n\n  \nDate and Location: \n\n19. September 2024\, \nEBV Elektronik GmbH\nIm Technologiepark 2-8\n85586 Poing bei München\n\nRegister now.
URL:https://www.zephyrproject.org/event/nxp-i-zephyr-os-on-mcus-a-linux-for-micros-poing-germany/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240924T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240924T160000
DTSTAMP:20260414T234633
CREATED:20240912T130532Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240912T130532Z
UID:10000117-1727172000-1727193600@www.zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:NXP I Zephyr OS on MCUs A Linux for Micros? - Kaarst\, Germany
DESCRIPTION:While Linux has long been predominant in microprocessor (MPUs) based embedded systems\, the availability of operating systems for microcontrollers (MCUs) is quite fragmented. Microcontroller manufacturers sometimes have their proprietary offerings\, and FreeRTOS has existed for many years. However\, not much provides a feature set that is even close to Linux. \nMeanwhile\, Zephyr® OS has become an option. Big semiconductor powerhouses are spending a lot of money and effort to have some of their current microcontroller generations supported by Zephyr. Together with NXP Semiconductors\, we would like to invite you to a half-day seminar to discuss Zephyr\, what it can do\, and how it looks and feels on NXPs’ most recent microcontroller family\, MCX. \nThe seminar will cover “traditional MCU development\,” which is done by small software teams\, usually with the software stack of the MCU supplier. New technologies and the growing complexity of the system context push this model to its limits. \nAgenda: \n\n10:30 – Registration\n11:00 – Opening and EBV Introduction\n11:10 – Traditional MCU Development Shift Happens Introducing Zephyr®\n13:00 – Lunch break\n14:00 – NXP MCX Microcontrollers Overview\n15:00 – Zephyr® on MCX\n16:00 – Event Closing\n\n\n  \nDate and Location: \n\n24 September\, 10:30 CEST\nAn der Gümpgesbrücke 7\n41564 Kaarst\nGermany\n\nRegister now
URL:https://www.zephyrproject.org/event/nxp-i-zephyr-os-on-mcus-a-linux-for-micros-kaarst-germany/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240926T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240926T160000
DTSTAMP:20260414T234633
CREATED:20240912T130837Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240912T130837Z
UID:10000118-1727344800-1727366400@www.zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:NXP I Zephyr OS on MCUs A Linux for Micros? - Utrecht\, Netherlands
DESCRIPTION:While Linux has long been predominant in microprocessor (MPUs) based embedded systems\, the availability of operating systems for microcontrollers (MCUs) is quite fragmented. Microcontroller manufacturers sometimes have their proprietary offerings\, and FreeRTOS has existed for many years. However\, not much provides a feature set that is even close to Linux. \nMeanwhile\, Zephyr® OS has become an option. Big semiconductor powerhouses are spending a lot of money and effort to have some of their current microcontroller generations supported by Zephyr. Together with NXP Semiconductors\, we would like to invite you to a half-day seminar to discuss Zephyr\, what it can do\, and how it looks and feels on NXPs’ most recent microcontroller family\, MCX. \nThe seminar will cover “traditional MCU development\,” which is done by small software teams\, usually with the software stack of the MCU supplier. New technologies and the growing complexity of the system context push this model to its limits. \nAgenda: \n\n10:30 – Registration\n11:00 – Opening and EBV Introduction\n11:10 – Traditional MCU Development\n\nShift Happens\nIntroducing Zephyr®\n\n\n13:00 – Lunch break\n14:00 – NXP MCX Microcontrollers Overview\n15:00 – Zephyr® on MCX\n16:00 – Event Closing\n\n\n  \nDate and Location: \n\n26 September\, 10:30 CEST\nZonnebaan 9\n3542 EA Utrecht\nNetherlands\n\nRegister now.
URL:https://www.zephyrproject.org/event/nxp-i-zephyr-os-on-mcus-a-linux-for-micros-utrecht-netherlands/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240926T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240926T220000
DTSTAMP:20260414T234633
CREATED:20240813T130327Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T130333Z
UID:10000105-1727373600-1727388000@www.zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr Project meetup: Munich\, Germany
DESCRIPTION:Join the Zephyr community meetup on September 26\, 2024 from 6:00 pm -10:00 pm! Hosted at the TNG Technology Consulting GmbH in Munich\, Germany\, this gathering is for anyone who’s curious about Open Source\, Embedded Systems Programming\, and Software Development. There will be presentations based on products running Zephyr\, subsystems and features you might not have heard of yet.  Expand your network and delve deep into the realm of dependable\, low-power embedded systems. Whether you’re an experienced expert or just stepping into these fascinating areas\, this meetup provides the perfect platform for everyone! \nCheck here to learn more about agenda & registration
URL:https://www.zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-project-meetup-munich-germany/
CATEGORIES:Meetup
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END:VCALENDAR