Hi Ralf,

It's great for you that you get to work in R&D, in such great fields as 
Embedded Linux and HW design!

You had ARM Experience before the BBB?

Where did you start learning on Embedded OS (as Linux) and on ARMs?

I come from the PIC world OS-less, and ARM with Linux (BBB) is so different 
to me! 

Yes, thanks to you the PINMUX works well.
I'm now reading on how to configure GPIO Pins to generate interrupt.
The hard part is setting the Interrupt Handler.

Was it straight-forward for you to work with interrupts?



On Monday, February 17, 2014 9:14:29 PM UTC+2, Ralf Roesch wrote:
>
> Hi Matt,
>
> yes, working on embedded Linux and developing hardware designs is may 
> daily job.
>
> Capes can be seen as addons (shields, breakout boards, ...) for the 
> beaglebone. 
> They bring out built in hardware features from the bone or extend the bone 
> with new hardware functions.
> Here you can find some capes: http://beagleboard.org/cape
>
> Nice to hear, that you successfully could complete your testing.
>
> regards
> Ralf
>
>

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