- Raspberry Pi - popular Linux SBCs, and now some really cool microcontrollers
- MESH — drop-in DIY IoT components
- Particle — Connected prototyping for wifi and cell-based products
- Hologram — similar to Particle
- Electric Imp — Connected device platform, with modules and services; part of Twilio now
Intel Edison — Tiny x86-class boarddead and buriedC.H.I.P — $9 computing platformseems to be gone now- bluz — BLE boards, compatible with Particle Cloud
<?php | |
namespace App\Http\Controllers; | |
use Illuminate\Http\Request; | |
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Auth; | |
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Cookie; | |
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Mail; | |
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Session; | |
use Ratchet\WebSocket\Version\RFC6455\Connection; |
; | |
; START Elliot Custom | |
; | |
M155 S5 ; turn on auto temp reporting | |
G21 ;metric values | |
M117 Setting Temps to [extruder0_temperature]/[bed1_temperature]... | |
M104 S[extruder0_temperature] T0; Setting Extruder Temp | |
M145 B[bed1_temperature] H[extruder0_temperature] ; send temps to LCD | |
M117 Waiting for Tip and Bed Temps... | |
M190 S[bed1_temperature]; Wait for bed |
If you are like me you find yourself cloning a repo, making some proposed changes and then deciding to later contributing back using the GitHub Flow convention. Below is a set of instructions I've developed for myself on how to deal with this scenario and an explanation of why it matters based on jagregory's gist.
To follow GitHub flow you should really have created a fork initially as a public representation of the forked repository and the clone that instead. My understanding is that the typical setup would have your local repository pointing to your fork as origin and the original forked repository as upstream so that you can use these keywords in other git commands.
-
Clone some repo (you've probably already done this step).
git clone git@github...some-repo.git
These are my preferences for a good commit message, feel free to fork this gist and add your own standards, or add comment here to share yours with the community.
- Don't add any file that is not related to the main issue, you can make it in a separate commit.
- Separating files that not related is important in the revert cases.
- Revise the whole changes always before committing and make sure to mention each change you made in the message.
- Imagine the commit as an Email to the owner or your team mates.
- Subject in the first and main sentence of the commit, it should be concise and to the point.
- It shouldn't exceed 50 char.
Also see the original Pieter Noordhuis's guide
You need:
- Raspberry Pi Model B (or B+) with a MicroSD Card $35-40
- An RTL-SDR dongle:
{ | |
// NORMAL SETTINGS | |
// =============== | |
"editor.quickSuggestions": { | |
"comments": "on", | |
"strings": "on", | |
"other": "on" | |
}, | |
"editor.suggestOnTriggerCharacters": true, | |
"editor.wordBasedSuggestions": true, |