424: Between Midnight and 6am
Embedded11 Aug 2022

424: Between Midnight and 6am

Gustavo Pezzi spoke with us about using fun and simple systems to explain low-level concepts and how they work in higher-level engineering tasks. For example, teaching microprocessor concepts using Atari 2600 assembly and physics by creating a simple game engine.

Gustavo's site is Pikuma.com. He has a free taster course on bit-shifting. We also talked about Atari 2600 Programming with 6502 Assembly and Physics Game Engine Programming.

Stella, a multi-platform Atari 2600 emulator

For examples of optimizing in different ways, check out this bit hacks page.

Gustavo is mentoring for Classpert's Building a Language course. (This is where Elecia teaches Making Embedded Systems.)

The conjecture about a shortage of electrical engineers was from The Register.

Transcript

Avsnitt(571)

452: Numbers on Computers Are Weird

452: Numbers on Computers Are Weird

Julia Evans spoke with us about how computers compute. We discussed number representation including floating point as well as Julia's extensive collection of 'zines and comics. Julia's zines about deb...

15 Juni 20231h 11min

451: From Concept to Launch

451: From Concept to Launch

Phillip Johnston of Embedded Artistry, Tyler Hoffman of Memfault, and Elecia White discuss the software tasks that tend to fall through the cracks after the device has all its features but before it i...

8 Juni 20231h 2min

450: Swimming Through Nutritious Slurry

450: Swimming Through Nutritious Slurry

Kari Love joined us to talk about soft robotics, robots in religion, and squishiness. Kari co-authored Soft Robotics: A DIY Introduction to Squishy, Stretchy, and Flexible Robots. Her website is kari...

25 Maj 20231h 6min

449: Soldering the Ukulele

449: Soldering the Ukulele

Chris and Elecia talk about internetting your thing, motivating yourself with cheese, a pile of scrabble letters, an electric ouija board, and a supervillain origin story. Elecia will be on a Memfault...

11 Maj 20231h 1min

448: Little Squiggles All Around

448: Little Squiggles All Around

Carl Bugeja makes actuators out of PCBs, puts them to work flapping origami bird wings (or moving robot rovers), and takes videos of the whole process. Oh, and get this, self-soldering circuits. Firs...

27 Apr 20231h 1min

447: All Sorts of Weird Problems

447: All Sorts of Weird Problems

We spoke with Chris Gammell about IoT, podcasting, relaxing, and learning. Chris works at Golioth.io. They have a neat blog that talks about reference designs, Zephyr RTOS, and making products. We tal...

13 Apr 20231h 5min

446: World's Best PB&J

446: World's Best PB&J

Chris and Elecia talk about ChatGPT, conferences, online compilers, and Ardupilot. Compiler Explorer: godbolt.org (and function pointer example) Jupyter Notebooks with colab: colab.research.google.com...

30 Mars 202354min

445: I Do Not Like Blinking

445: I Do Not Like Blinking

We spoke with Charlyn Gonda about making things glow, dealing with imposter syndrome, and using origami. Charlyn's website is charlyn.codes, the projects we talked about are documented there. You can ...

16 Mars 20231h 11min

Populärt inom Vetenskap

dumma-manniskor
p3-dystopia
allt-du-velat-veta
svd-nyhetsartiklar
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
rss-vetenskapsradion
det-morka-psyket
rss-spraket
rss-vetenskapsradion-2
dumforklarat
medicinvetarna
rss-ufo-bortom-rimligt-tvivel-2
sexet
hacka-livet
barnpsykologerna
rss-odla
vetenskapsradion
paranormalt-med-caroline-giertz
doden-hjarnan-kemisten
rss-tidslinjen-podcast