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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250311
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250314
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20241209T211042Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T180749Z
UID:10000125-1741651200-1741910399@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Embedded World Exhibition & Conference Program 2025
DESCRIPTION:From March 11 – 13\, 2025\, the embedded community will come together at the Embedded World Exhibition & Conference in Nuremberg\, Germany. The Zephyr Project is proud to be a long-time participant in this event\, showcasing our innovations and engaging with industry leaders\, developers\, and experts from around the world. \nWhy attend the Embedded World Exhibition and Conference?\nThe Embedded World exhibition and conference is the leading event for embedded systems professionals. It provides a platform for exploring the latest technologies\, from hardware and software design to M2M communication and complex system solutions. If you are a developer\, system architect\, product manager\, or technical leader\, this event is the perfect place to learn\, network\, and discover the future of embedded systems. \nZephyr Project’s Journey at Embedded World\nThe Zephyr Project has been attending Embedded World for many years\, and it’s always a highlight on our calendar. Over time\, we have seen tremendous growth in the interest and adoption of Zephyr RTOS across industries\, and we are excited to continue sharing our journey with the community. \nZephyr Project at Embedded World 2025\nThe Zephyr Project is excited to be at the Embedded World 2025\, bringing another year of exciting demos and inspiring stories to the exhibition. \nAt our booth\, you will: \n\nDiscover products and solutions: See devices and applications powered by the Zephyr RTOS in action.\nExplore member company innovations: Learn about cutting-edge use cases and demos presented by our member companies.\nGet insights into the Zephyr Project roadmap: Hear about our plans and our commitment to encouraging open source collaboration in the embedded community.\n\nWe are also thrilled to announce that Zephyr developers will be presenting talks at the Embedded World Conference\, covering key topics and sharing insights about the latest advancements in Zephyr RTOS. Don’t miss the chance to attend – register for the conference today! \nEmbedded World Conference Program 2025\nEstablished in Nuremberg back in March 2003\, the embedded world Conference is now going into its 23rd edition in 2025. The original concept of a unique combination of an exhibition for engineers and technical management on one hand and a world-leading conference at the intersection of applied research and industrial applications on the other hand has proven extremely successful. embedded world Exhibition & Conference is driven by technology as well as applications with a strong focus on system and cross domain aspects. And it is driven by the embedded community – and its annual meeting point. \nThe official program is now online! Select your personal program and use the early bird ticket. \nWe are excited to announce that the Zephyr Project is now an official community partner with the embedded world Conference and Exhibition from 2024 onwards. As part of our collaboration\, you can find Zephyr RTOS related talks from our community members at this year’s event. These sessions will cover various aspects of Zephyr\, showcasing its capabilities and the latest advancements from the Zephyr open source real-time operating system. \nDay 1\, March 11\, 2025\nDeveloping with Zephyr: Introduction – powered by Zephyr Project\nMarch 11\, 2025; 11:00 am – 11:30 am \nWhat’s in a Name: Is Zephyr Really (Just) an RTOS? Benjamin Cabé\, Developer Advocate\, Zephyr Project\nWhat more and more people now simply call “Zephyr” is officially branded as “Zephyr RTOS”. But is it really _just_ an RTOS? Zephyr offers more than just an RTOS kernel; much like it would be unfair to compare the Linux kernel to a full-blown distribution such as Ubuntu or RHEL\, Zephyr provides a complete embedded development platform that greatly simplifies the development of portable\, hardware-agnostic applications. We’ll explore some of the unique features Zephyr offers that are key to enabling productive development\, such as its testing framework\, its module and dependency management system that greatly simplifies the provisioning of development environments\, and more. If you’re already using Zephyr\, this session will help you discover some hidden gems you might have missed. And if you’re still considering Zephyr\,we’ll help you see the bigger picture especially if you’re maybe focusing on the “real-time” aspect too much without considering the broader ecosystem. \nMarch 11\, 2025; 11:30 am – 12:00 pm \nUnlocking Streamlined Development and Simplifing Maintenance with Zephyr RTOS for IoT Devices\, Luka Mustafa\, the founder and CEO of IRNAS\nWhether you’re working with diverse platforms or complex systems\, this session will provide real-world use cases\, best practices\, and insights into how Zephyr RTOS can enhance your projects. Learn how to reduce complexity\, improve scalability\, and boost performance for long-term success. This lecture will be presented by Luka Mustafa\, the founder and CEO of IRNAS. With over 10 years of experience developing embedded devices\, IRNAS specializes in designing and building advanced products and systems for some of the most challenging environments. Their work spans a wide range of applications\, from connected medical devices to mobile connected systems utilizing LoraWan\, NB-IoT\, LTE-M communication technologies among others\, as well as complex electronics and fiber optic systems.\nLuka will share valuable insights into the benefits of transitioning to Zephyr RTOS\, not only from a developer’s perspective but also from the standpoint of investors and business owners. He will highlight how Zephyr can help streamline the development process\, reduce technical complexity\, and improve system performance\, making it an ideal solution for developers. Additionally\, from a business perspective\, Luka will discuss how adopting Zephyr can lead to long-term cost savings\, enhance product scalability\, and create opportunities for faster time-to-market. \nMarch 11\, 2025; 12:00 pm – 12:30 pm \nBoosting Product Development with the Zephyr RTOS – A Critical Reflection\, Moritz Marquardt\, Carl Zeiss\nIn the fast-paced realm of embedded systems\, rapid product development is essential for market success. This presentation explores the advantages of Zephyr RTOS as a robust real-time operating system that helps developers navigate modern challenges. We’ll focus on its modular architecture\, versatile toolchain\, and its excellent and flexible support for many hardware platforms\, alongside its integration with IoT and standard functionalities. Using a specific example from mobile optical measurement technology\, we’ll illustrate how Carl Zeiss shortened their development cycle while ensuring software and product quality from the get-go\, i.e. long before all hardware components were finalized\, thanks to Zephyr RTOS. We’ll also critically examine its limitations\, such as the lack of APIs for scientific instruments and automation\, the learning curve for new developers\, and the complexities of integrating into existing systems. Emphasizing the need for a reassessment of development processes\, we’ll discuss the importance of engaging with the Zephyr community and actively participating in the project. Training developers on Zephyr’s functionalities is crucial for maximizing its potential. The goal of this presentation is to equip professionals and decision-makers with insights into leveraging Zephyr RTOS for efficient product development and to encourage well-prepared product initiatives. \nDeveloping with Zephyr: How to – powered by Zephyr Project\nMarch 11\, 2025; 1:45 pm – 2:15 pm \nUnlocking Zephyr’s Potential: A Practical Guide to Efficient Product Development\, Dr. Tobias Kästner\, Solution Architect for Medical IoT\, inovex GmbH\nNavigating the Zephyr RTOS requires a deep understanding of its concepts\, tools and practical implementation. Navigating the Zephyr RTOS requires a deep understanding of its core concepts and practical implementation.Even with Zephyr’s extensive sample library\, bridging the gap to successful product development remains challenging and requires additional knowledge and skills. This talk will provide a comprehensive overview of best practices\, from overcoming the learning curve to leveraging Zephyr’s hardware abstraction layer for seamless custom hardware integration. We’ll delve into effective application architecture\, code organization\, and the use of built-in emulators for efficient test-driven development. Additionally\, we’ll discuss the current state of safety certifications for Zephyr and explore opportunities to engage with the vibrant Zephyr community. \nKey takeaways: \n\nOvercoming the Zephyr learning curve\nSetting up Zephyr projects for optimal development\nLeveraging Zephyr’s hardware abstraction layer for custom hardware integration\nArchitecting Zephyr applications effectively\nOrganizing code and using emulators for test-driven development\nUnderstanding the status of safety certifications for Zephyr\nEngaging with the Zephyr community\n\nMarch 11\, 2025; 2:15 pm – 2:45 pm \nFrom Code to Current: Reducing Energy Consumption in Zephyr Device Drivers\, Fabian Plug\, grandcentrix\nWhen designing battery-powered sensor devices\, optimizing the power consumption of all components is crucial. While many sensors offer low-power modes\, the generic sensor interface in Zephyr may not always utilize these modes efficiently. In this talk\, I will provide an in-depth look at how Zephyr’s Power Management Subsystem works\, how to integrate it into your device drivers\, and how it can be used to further reduce power consumption. Using examples such as a battery level sensor and I2C sensors\, I will demonstrate various strategies to manage and minimize a sensor’s energy usage. There are multiple approaches to integrating power management within the Zephyr operating system\, and I will discuss how sensor characteristics influence which method results in longer battery life. Achieving optimal energy efficiency requires careful consideration of several parameters. Additionally\, I will cover how to accurately capture power consumption data\, explaining why conventional tools like multimeters may not be suitable for this task. Finally\, based on the collected data\, I will infer device usage patterns and validate the effectiveness of the power management implementation. \nMarch 11\, 2025; 2:45 pm – 3:15 pm \nPorting a Bluetooth Application to Zephyr OS – Benefits and Challenges\,David Egan\, Infineon Technologies\nThe Zephyr OS is based on a small-footprint kernel designed for use on resource-constrained and embedded systems: from simple embedded environmental sensors and LED wearables to sophisticated embedded controllers\, smart watches\, and IoT wireless applications. Zephyr provides product developers with a software platform that enables re-use of software while keeping the toolchain the same. Once Zephyr OS supports a particular wireless MCU and Bluetooth controller\, everything else is abstracted\, so software written for Zephyr is hardware agnostic. This paper examines the challenges and benefits of migrating a Bluetooth application to Zephyr OS and supporting it in the future. It also looks at the reasons why the Zephyr environment and development flow might be selected for a project\, considering the pros and cons. The main section of the paper chronicles a developer’s journey\, starting with setting up a Zephyr development environment and then moving on to porting an existing Bluetooth LE application. It describes the challenges faced and how any challenges are addressed along the way. The resulting paper is a guideline for developers who wish to adopt Zephyr OS for their Bluetooth application. \nMarch 11\, 2025: 3:30 pm (Hall 5) \nEnhancing Wi-Fi networking support in Zephyr RTOS – Yannis Glaropoulos\, Nordic Semiconductor\nWi-Fi is one of the leading wireless connectivity technologies for the Internet of Things\, offering a unique combination of key features\, such as native IP support\, ease of deployment\, excellent low-power performance\, as well as high on-demand data throughput. Therefore\, Wi-Fi is heavily used in a wide range of embedded IoT applications\, typically built on top of an RTOS solution. In this talk\, we will explore the different ways embedded Wi-Fi stacks can be integrated into RTOS environments and highlight the benefits of native and open-source Wi-Fi stack support in modern real-time operating systems\, such as the Zephyr RTOS. We will elaborate on the status of Wi-Fi support in Zephyr\, focusing on key stack components and show how it is used today on the Nordic Semiconductor nRF70 Series of Wi-Fi 6 companion ICs. \nZephyr for Safety & Security Applications – powered by Zephyr Project\nMarch 11\, 2025; 4:00 pm – 4:30 pm \nPreparing for the CRA when using Open Source Projects\, Kate Stewart\, The Linux Foundation\nThe Cybersecurity Resiliance Act (CRA) will be coming into effect in a few short years. Product makers will have different obligations than open source stewards for compliance. This talk will go into some of the requirements that open source stewards will be responsible for\, and identify some best practices that product makers should consider when using open source components in their offerings. The Zephyr project has been working towards making it easier for product makers to comply with the CRA over the last few years\, and will continue to work with the community to refine these capabilities. From automatic “Build SBOM” generation to LTS Vulnerability fixes\, the project has some useful starting points. This talk will discuss what is available\, and where some of the gaps will be for product makers to consider. \nMarch 11\, 2025; 4:30 pm – 5:00 pm \nZephyr as a Secure Choice for Embedded Development\,Pierre Lecomte\, Witekio\n1. Introduction: Why Security Matters in Embedded Systems\nThe rising need for secure embedded systems\nKey challenges: cybersecurity threats\, scalability\, IoT ecosystem vulnerabilities \n2. Overview of Zephyr RTOS\nBrief introduction to Zephyr’s architecture\nSupported hardware platforms and community-driven development\nKey features: modularity\, scalability\, open-source \n3. Security in Zephyr: A Deep Dive\nNative security features: secure boot\, access control\, and permissions\nMemory protection and role of kernel services in isolating tasks\nIntegration with hardware-based security features (Trusted Execution Environments\, etc.) \n4. Compliance with Security Standards\nHow Zephyr addresses security certifications (e.g.\, PSA Certified\, Functional Safety)\nZephyr’s role in meeting regulatory frameworks like GDPR\, HIPAA\, and ISO standards \n5. Use Cases: Zephyr in Real-World Secure Applications\nExamples of Zephyr in industries requiring high security: medical devices\, IoT\, and automotive\nCase study examples of secure\, production-ready solutions with Zephyr \n6. Conclusion: Zephyr as a Future-Proof\, Secure RTOS\nLong-term maintenance and security updates \nMarch 11\, 2025; 5:00 pm – 5:30 pm \nTesting Embedded Software With Zephyr\, Mohammed Billoo\, Embedded Software Consultant – MAB Labs\, LLC\nTesting should be integral to the software development life cycle\, especially embedded software. Embedded software engineers should always consider how they will test their implementation at every stage of the development process. They should establish the necessary testing infrastructure before writing even one line of code. Fortunately\, The Zephyr Project RTOS contains an extensive testing ecosystem that embedded software engineers can leverage during development. Zephyr has infrastructure for unit testing and integration testing. In this talk\, we will learn why testing is especially important for embedded software development and the tools that Zephyr offers to test during each stage of the development process (such as “Ztest” and “twister”). We will see real-world examples and demos of how to implement testing for a Zephyr application\, run the tests\, and evaluate the generated reports to understand how well we were able to evaluate our application. \nDay 2 – March 12\, 2025\nQualifying Safe Embedded Systems\nMarch 12\, 2025; 10:30 am – 11:00 am  \nLevel up your Embedded Testing Game – Fretish\, Robot and Twister: A Dream Team\, Christian Schlotter\, Carl Zeiss Meditec\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. This 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. We’ll discuss our progress in implementing this approach\, the challenges we encountered\, and potential solutions for deeper integration with the Zephyr project. \nMarch 12\, 2025: 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm \nHands-On Zephyr Project Workshop\, Jonas Remmert\, Phytec Messtechnik GmbH\nThis workshop supports embedded developers in exploring the Zephyr Project with a focus on IoT development. Participants will gain foundational knowledge of Zephyr and engage in hands-on exercises. This workshop will show interactively how to set up a development environment and how to configure a workspace (out-of-tree) application with Zephyr. It will cover topics like board abstractions\, RTOS features and higher layer software subsystems such as the Sensor API\, BLE stack and the networking stack. Hands-on exercises will provide attendees with a comprehensive guide to command-line interactions\, probing sensors via I2C Shell\, and retrieving sensor\ndata directly. Participants will learn to build modular applications using ZBus. Through theoretical insights and practical examples\, attendees will enhance their understanding of Zephyr’s capabilities in IoT applications. A GitHub repository will be provided\, serving as a reference and learning resource beyond the session. \nPrior Knowledge:\nParticipants attending the workshop are encouraged to have a basic understanding of embedded systems and programming concepts\, although this is not strictly necessary. Familiarity with command-line interfaces and general software development practices will be beneficial. A pre-installed native Zephyr setup on their personal machine is recommended\, as it allows for direct interaction with hardware and a deeper understanding of the development process. However\, this is not a requirement\, as a virtualized environment via GitHub Codespaces will be available\, providing an accessible alternative for those without a local Zephyr installation. Attendees should bring a notebook to participate fully in the hands-on exercises. This ensures they can follow along with the workshop activities\, whether working locally or using the virtualized setup. \nLearning Outcomes:\nParticipants will get a good understanding of the Zephyr Project’s core capabilities\, including setting up a development environment and using the\nZephyr Shell for sensor interactions and peripheral bringup. Attendees will gain hands-on experience with I2C and sensor data retrieval\, as well as extending applications using ZBus. They will be equipped to develop IoT applications using Zephyr\, using both hardware and virtualized environments\, thereby enhancing their embedded systems development skills. \nMarch 12\, 2025; 3:30 pm – 4:00 pm \nOpen Source Software in Safety-Critical Applications: Challenges and Collaborative Solutions\, Philipp Ahmann\, ETAS\nThere is a growing acceptance of open source in safety-critical domains and the collaborative efforts to integrate open source projects (particularly Linux) into products. The talk discusses the challenges faced when integrating open source technologies into highly complex systems that must adhere to stringent quality and safety-integrity standards. It emphasizes the importance of tools\, automation\, and traceability mechanisms to ensure compliance with standards like ASPICE\, ISO26262\, ISO61508 and ISO21434. By showcasing the collaborative efforts of open source projects such as ELISA (Enabling Linux in Safety-Critical Applications)\, the Zephyr Project\, and the Xen Project the talk addresses the specific requirements of safety-critical applications. These projects are actively working towards developing mechanisms and approaches that align with the expectations of safety-critical domains and can be integrated into system level analysis. By providing a reproducible system architecture\, a foundation for companies and projects seeking to adopt Open Source Software in safety-critical applications is offered. Overall\, this talk underscores the need for consistent linkage between code\, tests\, and requirements within the Linux kernel ecosystem including adjacent system elements like RTOSs and virtualization. \nDay 3\, March 13\, 2025\nMarch 13\, 2025: 10:00 am (Location: Hall 3) \nGetting Up to Speed with RTOS-based Firmware Development – Ali Aljaani\, Nordic Semiconductor\nAs IoT hardware advances\, the capabilities of smart devices continue to grow\, bringing them in line with the high expectations of today’s market.\n\nImplementing RTOS-based firmware has become essential to effectively manage the increasing complexity of both the hardware and the software driving these devices.\n\nIn this presentation\, Nordic Semiconductor will introduce its RTOS-based Software Development Kit\, the nRF Connect SDK\, built on one of the fastest-growing RTOS in the market\, the Zephyr RTOS.\nWhile adopting an RTOS-based firmware approach offers significant advantages\, it also presents certain challenges for developers new to this approach. We will discuss both the benefits and hurdles associated with this approach\, providing a comprehensive understanding of what to expect.\n\nWe will also showcase the various tools and resources developed by Nordic Semiconductor to simplify and accelerate the RTOS-based development process\, ensuring that developers can quickly become proficient in RTOS-based firmware development.\nMarch 13\, 10:00 am – 10:30 am \nRapid Deployment of IoT Infrastructure on Standards-based SOMs and Open-source Software\, Darrio Freddi\, SECO\nTime- and resource-limited IoT organizations must choose between investing in building their own IoT monitoring and management infrastructure or creating value for their customers and the market. Licensing off-the-shelf IoT platforms can accelerate time to market and give development teams space to produce valuable applications from connected device data. However\, these platforms can be limiting in the context of specific application requirements\, and also subject entire deployments to vendor lock-in. \nNow\, commercial IoT monitoring and management platforms derived from open-source software components are helping vertical solution providers overcome make versus buy tradeoffs. By combining open-source software like the Zephyr RTOS in endpoints with Yocto Linux in northbound infrastructure\, these platforms give IoT organizations: \n\n Increased deployment velocity\n Design freedom and deployment flexibility of open source\n Architecture-agnostic hardware compatibility for virtually any edge use case\n\nThis session discusses IoT device management and monitoring platform challenges by comparing open-source-derived IoT monitoring and management solutions to off-the-shelf alternatives. It goes on to demonstrate their development and deployment advantages when paired with standards-based COTS edge hardware by highlighting an end-to-end smart vending use case where cloud-based AI makes decisions based on fleet device data over an open\, secure\, and end-to-end infrastructure. \nMarch 13\, 2025; 3:00 pm – 3:30 pm \nNavigating the Software Ecosystem for Software-Defined Vehicles: A Multi-OS Architecture Approach\, Himanshu Pande\, Wind River\nAs the automotive industry transitions from distributed function-specific systems to centralized computing and software-defined vehicles\, a range of operating systems is required to meet diverse and often conflicting needs. Linux and Android\, with their flexibility and proven track records in numerous industries\, are set to play a key role in future vehicle platforms. However\, as vehicle manufacturers deploy applications with increasingly stringent requirements — safety\, security\, performance\, predictability — a more nuanced approach to software architecture is necessary. Real-time operating systems (RTOS)\, optimized for deterministic latency\, will remain essential for safety-critical use cases. In addition\, lightweight execution environments like Zephyr offer scalable solutions for constrained devices\, while AUTOSAR continues to provide a standardized framework for ensuring interoperability and compliance in embedded automotive software. Together\, these components — Linux\, RTOS\, Zephyr\, AUTOSAR\, and Android — must complement each other to form a cohesive in-vehicle software architecture that meets the demands of modern automotive innovation. In this presentation\, we will adopt the perspective of a software architect\, show when and why to use these different solutions\, their benefits and limitations\, how to combine them (e.g. using modern hardware\, virtualization) and how this could apply to other industries. \nMarch 13\, 2025; 3:30 pm – 4:00 pm \nZephyr Usage in Arm Automotive Solutions Software Stack\, Abhishek Pandit\, Arm\nThis talk provides an overview of how Zephyr RTOS is used in the reference software stack for Arm Reference Design-1 AE. The Arm Reference Design-1 AE introduces the concept of a high-performance Arm® NeoverseTM V3AE Application Processor (Primary Compute) system augmented with an Arm® Cortex®-R82AE based Safety Island for scenarios where additional system safety monitoring is required.\nThe Safety Island subsystem reference software for this system runs multiple instances of Zephyr RTOS to demonstrate main usecase examples. The talk will cover high level details of the sw stack and how Zephyr project has helped our team achieve this objective. \nHands-on Workshop: Embedded Development using Zephyr and Open Source Tooling\n \nIn addition to the above talks\, there will be a workshop on Wednesday\, March 12th\, 2025 at Lissabon Room\, Nuremberg Messe from 10:30 – 13:30 PM CET. \nThis 3-hour workshop will introduce attendees to ADI’s CodeFusion Studio™ that addresses this complexity challenge\, based on open-source tooling (GCC\, GNU build tools)\, ecosystems (Zephyr\, etc.)\, and config and debug tooling (VS Code\, etc.). \nYou’ll get hands-on experience with a MAX32690-based development platform\, which you can take home with you. Register now \nVisit the Zephyr Project Booth at Hall 4 – Booth 170\nAt the Zephyr Project booth\, there’s even more to look forward to: \n\nSwag and giveaways: Grab exclusive Zephyr swag and participate in board giveaways.\nInteractive demos: See Zephyr in action with live demos from our community and member companies.\nConnect and network: Chat with developers and learn directly from the people behind Zephyr.\n\nJoin the Conversation\nPlanning your visit or have questions? Check out the #2025-embedded-world channel in the Zephyr Discord for discussions\, updates\, and tips for making the most of the event. \n 
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/embedded-world-conference-program-2025/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Speaking,Developer Summit,Industry Conference,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/embedded-world-conference.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250306T173000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250306T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20250221T151218Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250221T151218Z
UID:10000133-1741282200-1741293000@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Meet Zephyr – Hands-on Workshop "Bring up YOUR own Board" mit Zephyr
DESCRIPTION:Das Meetup am 06.03.2025 in Erlangen wird euch eine hervorragende Möglichkeit bieten\, sich mit Zephyr Experten & Enthusiasten mit Praxisbezug zu Medizintechnik\, Automobilbau\, Industrie- und Messtechnik auszutauschen und wertvolle Kontakte zu knüpfen. \nNach der Begrüßung und einer kurzen Einleitung wird HANDS-ON wieder der Leitgedanke des Abends sein: \nIhr habt die Gelegenheit\, eure eigene “kundenspezifische” Hardware mitzubringen und mit uns zusammen eine erste Zephyr Portierung auf diese vorzunehmen. Ihr werdet dadurch praxistaugliche Erfahrungen im Umgang mit den für Zephyr typischen Hilfsmitteln Devicetree\, Kconfig und CMake sammeln. Wir wollen\, dass ihr durch unsere technisch fundierte Begleitung eure zukünftige Arbeit mit Zephyr verbessern könnt und gehen gemeinsam mit euch durch tatsächliche Fragestellungen einer Zephyr-Portierung auf “neue” Hardware. Dazu zählen auch Tests und Funktionsnachweise. Eventuell hilft euch der Abend auch\, Bedenken gegenüber Zephyr im Speziellen und Open Source Technologie im Allgemeinen abzubauen. Nutzt die Chance für euch! \nAlternativ kann auch auf bei uns vorhandene Evaluierungs-Hardware zurückgegriffen werden\, wenn ihr gerade eure neue oder bestehende Hardware nicht griffbereit habt! \nMehr details hier.
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/meet-zephyr-hands-on-workshop-bring-up-your-own-board-mit-zephyr/
CATEGORIES:Meetup,Training,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/600_526206042.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250226
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250228
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20250122T122841Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260106T103936Z
UID:10000127-1740528000-1740700799@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr Project Hands-On Meetup
DESCRIPTION:Entdecke die faszinierende Welt von Zephyr in unserem interaktiven Workshop! \nNote: This workshop will be in German language. If you don’t speak German\, please let the organizers know your preferred language in advance. \nTauche ein in die aufregende Welt des Zephyr-Projektes! In unserem hands-on Workshop erwarten dich zahlreiche praktische Beispiele\, die dir den Einstieg in dieses innovative Open-Source Echtzeitbetriebssystem erleichtern. Zephyr ist nicht nur in aller Munde\, sondern wird auch die Grundlage für das zukünftige Arduino-Projekt bilden. Darüber hinaus findet es Anwendung in einer Vielzahl von Geräten\, darunter Keyboards\, Smart Watches und digitale Lötkolben. Und das Beste: Es läuft auf über 750 verschiedenen Evaluierungsboards und Entwicklungskits! \nWir freuen uns\, Stephan und Tobias\, die engagierten Maintainer des Bridle-Projektes\, als unsere Gäste begrüßen zu dürfen. Ihr Ziel ist es\, dir den Einstieg in die Zephyr-Welt so einfach und zugänglich wie möglich zu gestalten. Nach einer spannenden Einführung zu den Hintergründen von Zephyr und Bridle\, wirst du durch eine Reihe von Tutorials geführt\, in denen du selbst aktiv werden kannst. Du wirst die Möglichkeit haben\, ein kleines Mikrocontroller-Board zu programmieren und die vielen nützlichen Funktionen von Zephyr für die Embedded-Entwicklung kennenzulernen. Nachdem du die obligatorische LED zum Blinken gebracht hast\, warten aufregende Herausforderungen auf dich: eine Shell\, die Ansteuerung von Motoren und die Programmierung von Soundeffekten! \n Zielgruppe: \n\nNeu- und Quereinsteiger in die Welt der Embedded-Software\nAlle\, die neugierig auf spannende Software-Technologien sind\n\nWas du mitbringen solltest: \n\nDeinen eigenen Laptop\n(Optional) Ein eigenes Mikrocontroller-Board\, wenn du möchtest\n\nBitte beachte\, dass die Anzahl der Teilnehmenden begrenzt ist. Daher wird das Event an zwei unabhängigen Abenden stattfinden: 26. und 27. Februar. \nMelde dich an und sei Teil dieser spannenden Reise in die Zukunft der Embedded-Entwicklung mit Zephyr! \nBeginn der Veranstaltung ist um 17 Uhr\, das Ende gegen 23 Uhr. \nVeranstaltungsort: \nAAccelerator \nBlezingerstraße 15 \nD-73430 Aalen \nzephyr-meetup-ostalb@zeiss.com \nKostenfreie Parkplätze stehen vor dem Gebäude zur Verfügung. \nAnmeldung unter https://tickets.hackwerk.fun/hwaa/
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-project-hands-on-meetup/
CATEGORIES:Meetup,Member Event,Training,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Zephyr_Meetup_Aalen_2025_1600_900_ZephyrLogo.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250201T090000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250202T170000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20250108T145246Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250116T224001Z
UID:10000126-1738400400-1738515600@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:FOSDEM 2025
DESCRIPTION:Meet Zephyr Project at FOSDEM 2025!\nHow many of you are planning to attend FOSDEM 2025? \nAre you planning to speak at the event or attend as an participant to learn? \nWhat topics excite you the most this year? Whether you are interested in embedded systems\, open source innovation\, safety or security\, FOSDEM 2025 promises to be a hub of activity for everyone in the developer community. \nThis year\, the Zephyr Project is thrilled to announce that we will have a table at FOSDEM! Our community has long participated in talks and sessions\, but this marks our first dedicated space to meet attendees\, showcase Zephyr RTOS based demo\, and deepen community engagement. So don’t forget to visit us at Building K\, Level 1 and meet our community members and maintainers – and don’t forget to grab some Zephyr kites\, stickers and magnets! \nMark your calendar to attend these Zephyr talks!\n\nSatNOGS-COMMS: An Open-Source Communication Subsystem for CubeSats\n\nTrack: Embedded\, Mobile and Automotive\nSpeaker & Company: Manolis Surligas\, Converge ICT Solutions & Services S.A.\nRoom: H.1302\nDay: Saturday\nStart: 10:30\nEnd: 10:55\n\n\n\n\nZSWatch – The Open Source Smartwatch\n\nTrack: Lightning Talks\nSpeaker & Company: Daniel Kampert\, ETO SENSORIC GmbH\n Room: H.2215 (Ferrer)\n Day: Saturday\n Start: 10:50\n End: 11:05\n\n\n\n\nZephyr: Open Source Project Best Practices Over Time\n\nTrack: Main Track – K Building\nSpeaker & Company: Kate Stewart\, The Linux Foundation\n Room: K.1.105 (La Fontaine)\n Day: Saturday\n Start: 16:00\n End: 16:50\n\n\n\n\nZephyr RTOS Roasting Party\n\nTrack: Embedded\, Mobile and Automotive\nSpeaker & Company: Benjamin Cabé\, The Zephyr Project\n Room: H.1302 (Depage)\n Day: Saturday\n Start: 17:00\n End: 17:25\n\n\n\n\nOpen-Source CPU: Deep-dive into RISC-V CFU and Zephyr\n\nTrack: RISC-V\nSpeaker & Company: Mohammed Billoo\, MAB Labs Embedded Solutions\n Room: H.1309 (Van Rijn)\n Day: Saturday\n Start: 17:15\n End: 17:55\n\n\n\n\nDeveloping BLE Host Applications with Zephyr\n\nTrack: Embedded\, Mobile and Automotive\nSpeaker & Company: Florian Limberger\, inovex GmbH\n Room: H.1302 (Depage)\n Day: Saturday\n Start: 17:30\n End: 17:55\n\n\n\n\nThe USB-MIDI 2.0 device class in Zephyr\n\nTrack: Embedded\, Mobile and Automotive\nSpeaker & Company: Titouan C.\, Scortex\n Room: H.1302 (Depage)\n Day: Saturday\n Start: 18:00\n End: 18:25\n\n\n\n\nEmbedded Video Systems With Zephyr\n\nTrack: Open Media\nSpeaker & Company: Josuah Demangeon\, Panoramix Labs\n Room: K.3.401\n Day: Sunday\n Start: 11:40\n End: 12:20\n\n\n\nLooking Back at FOSDEM 2024\nFOSDEM 2024 was a fantastic event filled with insightful talks and great opportunities to engage with the community. Check out our full recap in the post-event blog here. \n 
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/fosdem-2025/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Speaking,Industry Conference
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241212T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241212T153000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20241209T175614Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241209T181433Z
UID:10000123-1734015600-1734017400@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr RTOS - Empowering Next Generation EVSE Solutions: EFY Expo Chennai 2024
DESCRIPTION:About EFY Expo Chennai & EFY \nThe Electronics For You (EFY) Expo Chennai is a premier event in the electronics industry. It’s a event where the latest innovations\, technologies\, and products in the electronics sector are showcased. The event attracts a wide range of participants\, including manufacturers\, innovators\, entrepreneurs\, and technology enthusiasts. \nAt the core of the EFY Expo is the exhibition\, which features a vast array of electronic components\, production and assembly technologies\, test and measurement equipment\, and the latest in semiconductor technology. Companies from around the world participate\, making it a global hotspot for electronic manufacturing services (EMS) and original equipment manufacturers (OEMs). \nOne of the highlights of the EFY Expo is the conference segment\, where industry experts\, thought leaders\, and technocrats share insights on current trends\, challenges\, and future opportunities in the electronics sector. These sessions are highly informative\, offering attendees a chance to learn about the latest research\, market dynamics\, and policy developments. \nIn addition to exhibitions and conferences\, the EFY Expo hosts workshops and seminars. These sessions are designed to provide hands-on experience and skill development in various aspects of electronics\, from basic circuit design to advanced robotics and IoT (Internet of Things) applications. They are particularly beneficial for students\, hobbyists\, and professionals looking to enhance their skills. \nTalk info: \nDec 12\, 2024; 15:00 – 15:30 \nZephyr RTOS – Empowering Next Generation EVSE Solutions by Parthiban\, Founder & CTO\, Linumiz
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-rtos-empowering-next-generation-evse-solutions-efy-expo-chennai-2024/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Speaking,Industry Conference
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/Screenshot-2024-12-09-at-18.52.05.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241127T174500
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241127T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20241030T132729Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241104T094430Z
UID:10000121-1732729500-1732739400@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Hands-on Workshop "Bring up YOUR own Board" mit Zephyr
DESCRIPTION:Join us on November 27\, 2024\, for our third in-person Meetup at Navimatix GmbH in Jena\, Germany. \nThe Meetup is an excellent chance to connect with Zephyr experts and enthusiasts active in medical technology\, automotive\, industrial\, and measurement fields. After a brief introduction\, we’ll dive into a hands-on workshop where you can bring your own custom hardware to perform an initial Zephyr porting. Gain practical experience with Zephyr tools like Devicetree\, Kconfig\, and CMake\, and address real-world challenges in porting Zephyr to new hardware. \nDon’t have your own hardware? No problem! We have evaluation hardware available for you to use. \nWho Should Attend: \n\nExperienced embedded developers\nNewcomers and career changers\nSoftware and system architects\nAnyone curious about new and exciting software technologies\n\nWhat You’ll Need: \n\nLaptop\nYour hardware with power supply (and any necessary SWD/JTAG adapters)\n\nSchedule Highlights: \n\n5:45 PM Doors Open\n6:00 PM Welcome & Introduction\n6:10 PM Discussion on Zephyr and Bridle\n6:30 PM Hands-on Workshop\n8:15 PM Networking with Pizza & Drinks\n8:30 PM Wrap-up\n\nLearn more here. \nPlease note that all sessions will be conducted in German. \nLimited to 15 participants\, so reserve your spot soon! \nLocation: \nNavimatix GmbH\nTatzendpromenade 2\, 3rd Floor\n07745 Jena \nRegister here.
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/hands-on-workshop-bring-up-your-own-board-mit-zephyr/
CATEGORIES:Meetup,Training,Workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241121T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241121T220000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20241030T135758Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241101T145908Z
UID:10000122-1732212000-1732226400@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr Project Meetup: Zürich\, Switzerland
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to the Zephyr Project in-person meetup in Zürich\, Switzerland! \nThis gathering is for anyone who’s curious about Open Source\, Embedded Systems Programming\, and Software Development.\nThere will be presentations based on products running Zephyr\, subsystems and features you might not have heard of yet. \nExpand 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! \nOur primary language for group communication and events is English\, and we warmly welcome individuals from all backgrounds. Seats are limited\, and we kindly request you to register soon to secure your spot. \nNote: This meetup is part of the Zephyr Community Meetup Series\, gatherings hosted by community members\, with support from the Zephyr Project. \nTo learn more about the agenda and register\, please check here.
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-project-meetup-zurich-switzerland/
LOCATION:gardena digital hub\, Räffelstrasse 26\, Zürich\, 8045\, Switzerland
CATEGORIES:Meetup
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Zephyr-meetup-general-Zurich-Switzerland-November-21-2024-.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20241114T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20241114T150000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240911T103428Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241106T133512Z
UID:10000114-1731596400-1731596400@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Simulating Wireless Networks with BabbleSim & Zephyr // Zephyr Tech Talk #020
DESCRIPTION:Tune in on Thursday\, Nov. 14 (9:00 AM EST / 3:00 PM CET) for a new Zephyr Tech Talk live stream! \nWhat happens when you have a rare bug in a wireless device that only shows up occasionally\, and traditional debugging methods cause timeouts or fail to even reproduce the issue? Enter Babblesim—a tool that lets you simulate a network of wireless devices right on your workstation\, without the need for physical hardware. \nWith Babblesim\, you can run your tests at 100x real-time speed\, easily reproduce bugs\, and seamlessly integrate debugging tools like ASAN\, UBSAN\, or Valgrind. It’s a game-changer for wireless device development and\, combined with Zephyr’s native simulator\, can literally help save hours of debugging time. \nJoin us to learn more about Babblesim from Alberto and Jonathan\, as we will dive into some nice demos of how it can be used for simulating Bluetooth Low Energy and 802.15.4 devices\, including from within your CI pipeline or as you’re developing your code in a VS Code container 🤯 \nZephyr Tech Talks are live streams organized by and for the Zephyr community. Join us live to get a chance to ask your questions directly to our guests\, or simply catch the recording anytime afterwards.
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/simulating-wireless-networks-with-babblesim-zephyr-zephyr-tech-talk-020/
CATEGORIES:Zephyr Tech Talk
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LOCATION:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241112T163000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241112T220000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240912T135124Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240912T135903Z
UID:10000119-1731429000-1731448800@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr Project meetup: Aarhus\, Denmark
DESCRIPTION:Join us for an evening of insightful talks and networking opportunities with industry professionals. This event is perfect for anyone interested in expanding their knowledge and making valuable connections. If you want to delve deeper into Zephyr development this event will provide you with different perspectives on how to work with the Zephyr platform. \nDon’t miss this chance to enhance your expertise and grow your professional network! \nWhen: Tuesday 12th November 2024 – from 16.30 – 22.00 \nWhere: Mjølner Informatics‘ canteen: Valhal Finlandsgade 10 8200 Aarhus N \nParticipants: Product Owners\, IT managers\, Project Managers\, Scum Masters\, User Experience-designers\, Product Managers\, Architects\, Software Developers\, Quality Assurance Managers. \nCatering during the event: Snacks during the day and sandwiches and beers in the evening. \nLearn more about the agenda and register now.
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-project-meetup-aarhus-denmark/
CATEGORIES:Meetup,Member Event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241112T150000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241112T160000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20241209T180709Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241209T180709Z
UID:10000124-1731423600-1731427200@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Live community Q&A - New Zephyr 4.0 Release // Zephyr Tech Talk #021
DESCRIPTION:A new Zephyr release means a new occasion to hang out with some of the folks (only a few among litterally hundreds!) who made it happen in a new special episode of our Zephyr Tech Talks series. \nBenjamin will be joined by the release managers and some of the maintainers and contributors who worked on Zephyr 4.0. Together\, they will discuss what’s new\, do some short demos\, and answer all the questions you might have about this new release (or anything Zephyr-related\, really!). \nZephyr Tech Talks are live streams organized by and for the Zephyr community. Join us live to get a chance to ask your questions directly to our guests\, or simply catch up the recording anytime afterwards. \nWatch the stream in YouTube here.
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/live-community-qa-new-zephyr-4-0-release-zephyr-tech-talk-021/
CATEGORIES:Zephyr Tech Talk
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241028T073000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241029T170000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20241009T120644Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241009T120651Z
UID:10000120-1730100600-1730221200@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Open Source Summit\, 28-29 October 2024: Tokyo\, Japan
DESCRIPTION:Open Source Summit 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. It is the gathering place for open source code and community contributors. \nOpen Source Summit is a conference umbrella\, composed of a collection of events covering the most important technologies\, topics\, and issues affecting open source today. \nThis year\, there will be talks based on the Zephyr Project at the Open Source Summit. Don’t miss out on these sessions! Add these talks to your schedule today! \nMonday October 28\, 2024 10:15 – 10:30 JST: Keynote: Leveraging Zephyr and ML to Bring Smart Devices to Market\, Faster – Kate Stewart\, Vice President\, Dependable Embedded Systems\,The Linux Foundation\nEnd point devices are resource constrained\, either in terms of power\, memory or communication capabilities – sometimes all three. However\, being able to apply machine learning on these end point devices is possible and when applied strategically enables system wide efficiencies to be realized. This talk will explore the requirements and tradeoffs for such system to be considered when using the Zephyr RTOS and Tensorflow Lite for Embedded Microcontrollers projects. Learn more. \nTuesday October 29\, 2024 14:00 – 14:40 JST: Lessons Learned on Following Security Best Practices in Zephyr – Kate Stewart\, The Linux Foundation\nWhen the Zephyr project launched in 2016\, the lack of standardized security best practices in the IoT market segment was a known problem. It was one of the goals the project wanted to address\, and started working on from before day 1. This talk will go through the journey of the last 8 years of applying known best security practices to an open source project\, including becoming a CVE Numbering Authority\, and forming a PSIRT team from volunteers from different companies. This team has been managing embargo windows\, bulk vulnerability reports as well as the occasional vulnerability reported from the community. It is possible for open source projects to follow Security Best Practices and this talk will let others leverage the key lessons that Zephyr has learned over time. Learn more. \nTuesday October 29\, 2024 14:50 – 15:30 JST: Secure and Encrypted Boot in Zephyr RTOS – Parthiban N\, Linumiz\nMCUboot enables secure booting of Zephyr RTOS using asymmetric cryptographic signature verification with a public key. Typically\, the hash of the public key is embedded within the MCUboot binary\, ensuring its integrity. For enhanced tamper protection\, this hash can also be securely stored and retrieved using hardware keys. Embedded SoCs\, such as the i.MX RT\, offer advanced security features like High Assurance Boot (HAB)\, Data Co-Processor (DCP)\, and Trusted Firmware-M (TF-M) for implementing TrustZone in SoCs like the nRF91. These features enable secure storage with hardware crypto acceleration or external security modules (e.g.\, TPM\, EdgeLock) to store keys in a hardware vault. This presentation will explore MCUboot secure booting with hardware keys\, using the NXP i.MX RT as an example. We’ll delve into HAB for booting signed and encrypted MCUboot\, establishing a hardware root of trust\, and booting Zephyr RTOS using keys from OTP for verification. Additionally\, we’ll discuss using the TF-M backend and OTP for securely booting TrustZone-enabled SoCs. Learn more.
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/open-source-summit-28-29-october-2024-tokyo-japan/
CATEGORIES:Developer Summit,Industry Conference,Linux Foundation Event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241017T173000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241017T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240814T140040Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240814T141901Z
UID:10000106-1729186200-1729198800@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr Project meetup: Hamburg\, Germany
DESCRIPTION:Join us for the Zephyr Project on Thursday\, October 17\, 2024\, from 5:30 – 9:00 pm CEST! \nThe event will be hosted at ZAL Zentrum für Angewandte Luftfahrtforschung\, located at Hein-Sass-Weg 22\, 21129 Hamburg. \nArrive early for a special Guided Tour at ZAL from 4:30 – 5:30 pm\, showcasing cutting-edge advancements in aerospace research. \nThe meetup will feature engaging presentations and discussions on the latest in Open Source\, Embedded Systems Programming\, and Software Development. \nCheck here for more information about agenda and registration. \n 
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-project-meetup-hamburg-germany/
CATEGORIES:Meetup
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241010T083000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241010T153000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240816T135750Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240816T142810Z
UID:10000112-1728549000-1728574200@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr® OS on MCUs: Linux for Micros? | Sweden
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://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-os-on-mcus-linux-for-micros-sweden/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241009T173000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241009T193000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240826T094300Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240923T101546Z
UID:10000113-1728495000-1728502200@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr Project meetup: Austin\, Texas
DESCRIPTION:Join the Zephyr community meetup on October 9\, 2024 from 5:30 pm -7:30 pm! Hosted by NXP Semiconductors in Austin\, Texas\, 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 the agenda and the registration.
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-project-meetup-austin-texas-2/
LOCATION:Capitol Factory\, 701 Brazos St\, Austin\, Texas\, TX\, 78701\, United States
CATEGORIES:Meetup,Member Event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241008T083000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241008T153000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240816T135559Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240816T135559Z
UID:10000111-1728376200-1728401400@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr® OS on MCUs: Linux for Micros? | Ireland
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://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-os-on-mcus-linux-for-micros-ireland/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241003T083000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241003T153000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240816T135341Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240816T135424Z
UID:10000110-1727944200-1727969400@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr® OS on MCUs: Linux for Micros? | Finland
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://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-os-on-mcus-linux-for-micros-finland/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20241001T083000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20241001T153000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240816T135109Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240816T135109Z
UID:10000109-1727771400-1727796600@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr® OS on MCUs: Linux for Micros? | Denmark
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://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-os-on-mcus-linux-for-micros-denmark/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240926T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240926T220000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240813T130327Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240813T130333Z
UID:10000105-1727373600-1727388000@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://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-project-meetup-munich-germany/
CATEGORIES:Meetup
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Zephyr-project-Munich-Germany-meetup-general.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240926T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240926T160000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240912T130837Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240912T130837Z
UID:10000118-1727344800-1727366400@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://zephyrproject.org/event/nxp-i-zephyr-os-on-mcus-a-linux-for-micros-utrecht-netherlands/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240924T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240924T160000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240912T130532Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240912T130532Z
UID:10000117-1727172000-1727193600@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://zephyrproject.org/event/nxp-i-zephyr-os-on-mcus-a-linux-for-micros-kaarst-germany/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240919T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240919T160000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240912T130350Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240912T130350Z
UID:10000116-1726740000-1726761600@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://zephyrproject.org/event/nxp-i-zephyr-os-on-mcus-a-linux-for-micros-poing-germany/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240919
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240920
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240726T025420Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240726T025420Z
UID:10000104-1726704000-1726790399@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://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-workshop-vienna-austria/
CATEGORIES:Industry Conference,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Zephyr-workshop.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240917T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240917T160000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240912T125059Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240912T125059Z
UID:10000115-1726567200-1726588800@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://zephyrproject.org/event/nxp-i-zephyr-os-on-mcus-a-linux-for-micros-leonberg/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240916
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240920
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240726T024228Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240726T024228Z
UID:10000103-1726444800-1726790399@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://zephyrproject.org/event/open-source-summit-europe-vienna-austria/
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Speaking,Linux Foundation Event
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240912T083000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240912T153000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240816T134902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240816T134902Z
UID:10000108-1726129800-1726155000@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://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-os-on-mcus-linux-for-micros-bolton/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240910T083000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240910T153000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240816T134452Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240816T134632Z
UID:10000107-1725957000-1725982200@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://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-os-on-mcus-linux-for-micros-maidenhead/
CATEGORIES:Member Event,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://zephyrproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/download-2.jpeg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240824T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240826T170000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240704T121232Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240704T121232Z
UID:10000101-1724486400-1724691600@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Opportunity Open Source
DESCRIPTION:Join us for Opportunity Open Source 2024\, organized by Canonical! Explore the world of open source software with talks\, workshops\, and hackathons at IIT Kanpur\, India\, from August 24-26\, 2024. \nDiscover insights into Zephyr\, the Real-Time Operating System for IoT\, ideal for low-resource hardware like microcontrollers. Learn how Zephyr is shaping the future of embedded systems and IoT applications. \nWhether you’re a developer\, designer\, writer\, or enthusiast\, there’s something for everyone. Enhance your skills\, contribute to impactful projects\, and boost your career in open source. \nDon’t miss out – submit your ideas for talks\, workshops\, demos\, and more! \nCall for abstracts is open – submit soon!
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/opportunity-open-source/
LOCATION:IIT Kanpur\, G66M+W5J\, Kalyanpur\,Uttar Pradesh\, 208016\, India
CATEGORIES:Ambassador Speaking,Industry Conference
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Moscow:20240730T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Moscow:20240730T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240710T133958Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240710T133958Z
UID:10000102-1722358800-1722369600@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Embedded Israel #16 - The first Zephyr Project meetup
DESCRIPTION:Embedded Israel is organizing the inaugural Zephyr Project meetup on July 30\, 2024. \nJoin the Zephyr community for an agenda featuring esteemed speakers Ron Munitz (Chief of Everything at The PSCG) and Vadim Malenboim (Sr. Staff Field Application Engineer at SiFive). \nThe event will commence with a brief gathering and welcome notes introducing Embedded Israel and meetup host. \nRon Munitz will provide a practical introduction to the Zephyr Project\, covering foundational concepts\, rapid application development\, flashing\, and debugging across various platforms including simulators\, emulators\, HiFive1\, and Nordic’s nRF52840. \nVadim Malenboim will delve into technical problem-solving\, focusing on device trees and their modification to enable debugging and functionality testing of the hifive1_revb board within Zephyr environments. \nFollowing this session\, Lian Granot (Co-Founder & CTO at Sternum) will lead ‘Observability 101\,’ a hands-on workshop exploring data collection techniques and bug investigation methodologies for Zephyr Devices. \nParticipants will gain practical insights and access to Sternum’s IoT observability platform for real-time analytics. \nThe meetup will conclude with closing remarks and an engaging prize-winning game facilitated by The PSCG and the Nordic Semiconductor. \nDon’t miss this opportunity to deepen your understanding of Zephyr’s capabilities and network with industry experts. \nRegister for the meetup here.
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/embedded-israel-16-the-first-zephyr-project-meetup/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240710T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240710T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240612T125906Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240614T100723Z
UID:10000100-1720634400-1720643400@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr Project Meetup: Austin\, Texas
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to the Zephyr Project in-person meetup in Austin\, Texas. This gathering is for anyone who’s curious about Open Source\, Embedded Systems Programming\, and Software Development.\nThere 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! Our primary language for group communication and events is English\, and we warmly welcome individuals from all backgrounds. Seats are limited\, and we kindly request you to register soon to secure your spot. \nNote: This meetup is part of the Zephyr Community Meetup Series\, gatherings hosted by community members\, with support from the Zephyr Project. \nTo learn more and register\, check out this link now.
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-project-meetup-austin-texas/
LOCATION:Jester King Brewery\, 13187 Fitzhugh Rd\, Austin\, TX\, 78736\, United States
CATEGORIES:Meetup
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20240620T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20240620T220000
DTSTAMP:20260404T222217
CREATED:20240515T023024Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240614T132418Z
UID:10000097-1718906400-1718920800@zephyrproject.org
SUMMARY:Zephyr Project Meetup: Paris\, France
DESCRIPTION:[vc_row type=”in_container” full_screen_row_position=”middle” column_margin=”default” column_direction=”default” column_direction_tablet=”default” column_direction_phone=”default” scene_position=”center” text_color=”dark” text_align=”left” row_border_radius=”none” row_border_radius_applies=”bg” overflow=”visible” overlay_strength=”0.3″ gradient_direction=”left_to_right” shape_divider_position=”bottom” bg_image_animation=”none”][vc_column column_padding=”no-extra-padding” column_padding_tablet=”inherit” column_padding_phone=”inherit” column_padding_position=”all” column_element_direction_desktop=”default” column_element_spacing=”default” desktop_text_alignment=”default” tablet_text_alignment=”default” phone_text_alignment=”default” background_color_opacity=”1″ background_hover_color_opacity=”1″ column_backdrop_filter=”none” column_shadow=”none” column_border_radius=”none” column_link_target=”_self” column_position=”default” gradient_direction=”left_to_right” overlay_strength=”0.3″ width=”1/1″ tablet_width_inherit=”default” animation_type=”default” bg_image_animation=”none” border_type=”simple” column_border_width=”none” column_border_style=”solid”][vc_column_text text_direction=”default”]Join the Zephyr community meetup on June 20\, 2024 at 6-10:00 pm! Hosted at the Ac6 office in Paris\, France 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[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]
URL:https://zephyrproject.org/event/zephyr-project-meetup-paris-france-2/
CATEGORIES:Meetup
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END:VCALENDAR