I’ve been beavering away at my writing Grove drivers for LabVIEW, but I also wanted a functional hat for my Radxa X4… Yesterday I cracked the OLED and today I got my hat PCB in for testing…
Today is a good day…
I’ve been beavering away at my writing Grove drivers for LabVIEW, but I also wanted a functional hat for my Radxa X4… Yesterday I cracked the OLED and today I got my hat PCB in for testing…
Today is a good day…
Thank you for your sharing and using Seeed’s products.
Which Grove HAT are you using in the video?
One I designed myself, based on the Pico grove interface. Can share the kicad project if there’s interest
hi there,
This is really great! opens a whole new lane for LabVIEW folks to use the grove products. Being a certified labview Dev back as far as LabView 3. I can say this is great and we had to build our device drivers ourself what a “ball of Yarn” Nice work on doing this.
Looks like it lends itself well to making up some I2C logic and get the handshake going ,Berry cool man!
If you can create a selector or something to pick from a list of Grove Sensors , you WILL have something commercially viable. So keep going…
And thank you for contributing to the discussion and forum too.
I’m watching this thread !
HTH
GL PJ
I’m gonna open-source everything as soon as I reach a point where it is organised. I’ll make my money doing training…
If anyone wants it sooner just DM me.
Just got the UARTs tested, only need to test SPI and all hardware is done…
I’ve done about 10 I2C drivers so far, loads of digital and analog boards too.
We have improvements to the Pico firmware planned … pico-w soon, which will rock!! and I’d like some sort of triggered acquire and generate.