**** BEGIN LOGGING AT Sun Feb 14 02:59:57 2021 Feb 14 03:10:35 Me? Feb 14 03:10:50 Me! Feb 14 03:11:10 * set_ likes the apples in Tony. Feb 14 03:11:16 But...my BBB will do just fine! Feb 14 03:33:58 Me, me, me! /me Me! Feb 14 03:34:01 Dang it. Feb 14 03:34:21 mic check, one-two? Feb 14 03:36:37 Tough room. Sheesh. Anyway. I here my calls of world thriving inside me. I am going to go in a dim lit area and sit. Wish me luck? Feb 14 03:51:39 what you were standing this whole time!? Feb 14 03:54:42 Yes and still! Feb 14 03:56:16 It is almost 10:00 and I am waiting, GenTooMan. Feb 14 03:56:22 Did you see the lib? Feb 14 03:56:41 Although impatiently, I waited. Feb 14 03:57:40 I am turning on you like a second baseman that just batted a ball over the third baseman's arm reach. Feb 14 03:57:46 Second! Feb 14 03:58:23 Anyway, I do not think that the BBB can handle the source in that lib. w/out PRUs. Feb 14 03:58:38 The fastest the thing goes is 170 Mhz. Feb 14 03:58:50 But, I am sure I can slow that down. Feb 14 03:59:11 The PRUs handle 200 Mhz. Feb 14 03:59:45 Also, the...10:00. Dang it. Feb 14 04:00:58 It is a neat quaruped anyway. Although it is for the pi, it is still a nice project that fellow made. Feb 14 04:02:17 I saw he had a Pockt NC too. I think those are controlled via the PRUs on the BBB and the likeness. Feb 14 04:03:58 Anyway GenTooMan, I had a 'long day' and my Replicape bit the dust for the 12v capacitive sensor PNP. Feb 14 04:04:23 That bunch of pins no longer function nor have they ever b/c of my mistakes. Feb 14 04:04:25 Blah. Feb 14 04:04:43 endstop time. Double Blah. Feb 14 04:27:00 bleah bleah bleah? Feb 14 04:27:24 Well sometimes things work sometimes they don't if you haven't destroyed the PRU pins on the BBB that's a good start. Feb 14 04:44:25 there are several things you may wish to consider. PWM is one thing, PDM is another, PWM uses a simple on off timing IE on then for for a period whereas PDM modulates the output to keep the frequency of the change above a threshold for simple filtering. Feb 14 04:44:48 Nice. Feb 14 04:44:50 I'm not sure you could use PDM (FYI) because it's oft called a delta sigma modulator. Feb 14 04:45:11 Oh. That sounds difficult. You are probably right. Feb 14 04:45:29 Which means 50% with a base clock of 10MHz would be a 5MHz clock. It's not difficult but it is complicated. Feb 14 04:45:55 See. Feb 14 04:45:57 Also very few things can be driven that fast (sad but true). Feb 14 04:46:08 Right. Feb 14 04:46:15 I am not going into warp speed here. Feb 14 04:48:35 Although, and I know, that sounds silly, I am not looking to clock things quickly and furiously. I just need to have a working model to 'play' w/ when this BBB gets cold. Feb 14 04:50:27 I will keep trying on my end instead of harassing random people about porting their projects to my board. My board. I know it represents more than just my board here but... Feb 14 04:50:46 Ok some advice then pick a PWM frequency that is clearly audible so you can know it's actually happening. Feb 14 04:51:07 1Khz is probably obnoxiously loud enough. :D Feb 14 04:51:30 GenTooMan: The violin is made! Feb 14 04:52:10 I pick it up on Wed. Although it is at 75% or 3/4 size, I am going to the proud owner of a F-F-Fiddle. Feb 14 04:52:13 Nice, heh? Feb 14 04:52:34 Oh the Violince! Feb 14 04:52:34 Then, comes the dirty work and BELA. Feb 14 04:52:38 No. Feb 14 04:52:55 I upset you. Feb 14 04:53:19 I know I call you out all the time. I will refrain unless I am saying something w/ minor intelligence. Feb 14 04:53:34 I know you are busy person. Feb 14 04:58:24 so you had a violin printed for you in 3d? Feb 14 05:00:33 Yes Sir... Feb 14 05:00:57 It is going to be electric and small. Feb 14 05:01:52 GenTooMan: I found some 'cheaper' components like the bridge, pickup, and strings (four string). Feb 14 05:02:22 Violin/Fiddle/Depends on what side of the world, I guess. Feb 14 05:05:43 more like what you were use to when you are in your youth. A fiddle (IE see Fiddler on the rough) uses a violin the music is not the same nature as those who would use the term violin. That seems to be the primary difference in usage. Feb 14 05:06:03 rough= roof I type to fast for my own good. Feb 14 05:07:20 Yep. Feb 14 05:07:25 Yep and yep. Feb 14 05:14:07 not much I can say regarding that to be fair. Do you have boards you directly drive from the BBB or is that the one you refereed to having permanent dysfunction? Feb 14 05:17:41 Oh. Feb 14 05:17:55 The replicape was the one I purchased. I did not make it. Feb 14 05:18:33 Permanent, yes. it is dysfunctional for now or for forever I am assuming. I have not broke off the connector just yet. Feb 14 05:18:48 It may be the driver too. Feb 14 05:18:54 No way to tell just yet. Feb 14 05:23:19 so nothing is burned on the board then? Feb 14 05:23:55 No. Nothing. Feb 14 05:32:48 do you have some documentation for testing the board? I suggest starting with that. Feb 14 05:35:26 Yes. Feb 14 05:35:34 I took da' notes! Feb 14 05:36:22 I just do not know how to test the driver yet and the entire system will not work w/out a driver (I think). Feb 14 05:36:28 There are four or five of them. Feb 14 05:36:38 It has some caps... Feb 14 05:37:34 I tested the sensor on many levels, e.g. battery, bench supply, and via the pins on the board w/ a DMM. Feb 14 05:37:50 I tested the pins on the board too. Feb 14 05:38:05 gnd, what they call sig, and 12v and/or 5v. Feb 14 05:38:30 Each one from gnd returns no voltage. Feb 14 05:38:52 I get no 3.3v, 5v, or 12v on the pins. Feb 14 05:39:24 It may be source defined. Feb 14 05:39:48 I tried w/ .yaml or .ini or whatever they are called. Oh. .cfg files. Feb 14 05:40:33 Anyway, for some odd reason, either software defined or hardware defined, I get nothing as output in the form of voltage so far. Feb 14 05:43:42 Oh! And... Feb 14 05:44:23 Since I have as PNP capacitive sensor, I was supposed to place a 1K ohm on the 3.3v line and GND so it could be utilized. Feb 14 05:45:35 It is my fault, sort of. Sort of not but...heh? I ran the source and program while attached to 12v (so many amps) switching that I think I damaged the Replicape. Feb 14 05:46:08 All over PNP and NPN differences. Feb 14 05:46:19 sensors, heh. Feb 14 05:49:29 GenTooMan: On another note, the source for the 3D Print stated it would cost $850.00 for one piece (the smallest piece). Feb 14 05:49:56 That is ridiculous. I got all three printed and it was duty-free and free as in beer. Feb 14 05:50:25 Does 3D Printing really cost that much to produce? Feb 14 05:52:48 I mean...I know machines cost funds, the filament costs too, and time (man power). But, many hundreds for a couple pieces sounds ill-fated. Feb 14 06:21:01 is there a 'bare' image available for the bb/bbb without cloud9 etc? Feb 14 06:24:42 console Feb 14 06:25:45 yes...console Feb 14 07:36:06 dear lord this is slooow lol Feb 14 08:30:10 grogdor: the fairly minimal "console" image can be found at https://elinux.org/Beagleboard:Latest-images-testing#Debian_10_.28Buster.29_Console Feb 14 09:02:54 thanks, that's working wonderfully Feb 14 09:05:53 i was trying https://download.freebsd.org/ftp/snapshots/arm/armv7/ISO-IMAGES/12.2/FreeBSD-12.2-STABLE-arm-armv7-BEAGLEBONE-20210211-r369250.img.xz and it was NOT happy, might be expecting a BBB Feb 14 09:17:14 ah this built-in usb interface networking is slick, was wondering why i needed dnsmasq... Feb 14 09:31:49 hello Feb 14 09:34:37 I got a beaglebone green and trying to figuer out how to use it. I know a little bit about linux but nothing about theses Pi like systems. Feb 14 10:25:22 Sora231: try powering it up? https://beagleboard.org/getting-started#step1 Feb 14 10:26:14 yep its on, flashing away next to me Feb 14 11:04:19 i think i just started to flash a newer version of Debian onto it Feb 14 11:25:46 how do i check if it that worked/ Feb 14 11:34:24 Sora231: flashing has a very recognizable led pattern (back-and-forth) and once it's done it will turn itself off Feb 14 11:34:45 yep thats what it did, rebooted it without the sd card Feb 14 11:35:19 does it automatically reverse the changes in that txt file? Feb 14 11:35:40 no Feb 14 11:35:50 strange Feb 14 11:36:30 note that normally instead of manually making a flasher image by modifying /boot/uEnv.txt on the sd card you can just download a pre-made flasher image (they're listed as "Flasher" on the images page) Feb 14 11:37:20 after it turned off and i rebooted it in uEnv.txt the # returned infront of the command Feb 14 11:37:47 well if i knew that eailer i would of done that Feb 14 11:37:54 aren't you now looking at the system on eMMC rather than the one on sd card? Feb 14 11:38:02 should be Feb 14 11:38:34 so why would its /boot/uEnv.txt be modified? that would result in a system that can't boot normally Feb 14 11:39:33 good point Feb 14 11:39:45 note that sometimes people do manage to modify /boot/uEnv.txt on eMMC by accident and end up reflashing an old system onto SD card instead of flashing the new system from SD card to eMMC ... may want to double-check the system image date using "cat /etc/dogtag" Feb 14 11:39:55 so i just made my own "Flasher" image Feb 14 11:40:02 yes Feb 14 11:41:13 Buster IoT Image 2020-04-06 Feb 14 11:41:20 all good! :) Feb 14 11:42:24 so this should all be configured Feb 14 11:42:47 may want to wipe the sd card so you don't end up accidently reflashing your beaglebone again ;) Feb 14 11:45:23 yep Feb 14 11:46:08 Is this just like any install of debian? Feb 14 11:46:31 i dont use linux often but been slowly teaching my self Feb 14 11:47:12 I mean, it is an install of debian, not "like any install of debian" though Feb 14 11:47:52 it has a bunch of stuff meant to be convenient for beaglebone users specifically Feb 14 11:48:15 Well its ported to ARM and has Cloud9. not too sure what else has changed but what im currently SSHed into is the linux kernel right? Feb 14 11:48:27 it's not "ported to ARM", debian is available for ARM Feb 14 11:49:03 and you don't "SSH into" a kernel, you SSH into the linux system Feb 14 11:49:20 but yeah, it's just a debian system with specific packages installed and some configuration done Feb 14 11:50:15 you can also get a more minimalistic debian image (the "console" image) for people who prefer to just install packages themselves instead of having stuff like cloud9 preinstalled Feb 14 11:50:30 Linux System, thats what i meant. Feb 14 11:51:04 i should be able to install a de and remote in right Feb 14 11:51:29 running a desktop environment on a beaglebone is generally considered a terrible experience Feb 14 11:51:41 and probably also doesn't fit on the on-board eMMC Feb 14 11:52:02 that's why it no longer ships with one :P Feb 14 11:52:22 or the hdmi port Feb 14 11:53:18 when people do use the hdmi port they generally use it for a single-window-fullscreen custom GUI (e.g. a touchscreen control panel for some application), not for a desktop environment Feb 14 11:53:39 though I think most people don't use it at all, which is why many beaglebone variants lack HDMI output Feb 14 11:54:32 (disabling video in /boot/uEnv.txt also frees up a whole bunch of pins on the P8 expansion header for other use) Feb 14 11:54:52 is there any pins that can be used for audio? Feb 14 11:56:03 there are pins that can be interfaced (via I²S or similiar digital audio interface) to ADC/DAC ICs Feb 14 11:57:05 it can also directly output an S/PDIF signal, requiring only a transmitter/driver circuit (for either a coaxial or optical (TOSLINK) output) Feb 14 11:57:38 or it can output audio via HDMI, if enabled (which it is by default) Feb 14 11:59:14 for a detailed overview of what P9/P8 pins are used/usable for what purpose, see the P9 and P8 tabs of my pins spreadsheet: https://goo.gl/Jkcg0w#gid=1775283126 Feb 14 12:16:24 i guess the original beaglebone wasnt around for long before the Black came out? Feb 14 12:16:52 not finding a lot of docs and such but it seems like they're pretty much the same, just minus the Blackness upgrades Feb 14 12:17:17 work discontinued a product that used BB's so i have a whole stack of em now Feb 14 12:17:38 wikipedia says original BeagleBone (now called the BeagleBone White) was released 2011-10-31 and the black was released 2013-04-23 Feb 14 12:18:18 they have a high degree of compatibility Feb 14 12:18:51 i cant find a lot of docs for the green either Feb 14 12:18:56 black has heeps Feb 14 12:19:36 green is very close to the black except Seeed removed HDMI and made some weird random changes :P Feb 14 12:20:04 the schematics are available for all of them Feb 14 12:20:04 what kind of weird changes am i gonna bump into? Feb 14 12:20:15 "yes" Feb 14 12:20:46 Sora231: oh you have a Green? so you don't have HDMI at all Feb 14 12:21:03 so that whole part of earlier discussion can be ignored :P Feb 14 12:21:04 nope, 2 grove headders and a micro usb port Feb 14 12:22:16 so the Grove headers are a Green-specific addition, they also replaced the 24 MHz crystal with a spread-spectrum clock generator which is a weird choice and will make all clocks on the system less stable (which is probably why they undid that change for the Green Wireless) Feb 14 12:22:33 and iirc the Green did something weird with power connections Feb 14 12:23:14 removed barrel jack in favor for a micro usb port Feb 14 12:23:28 and replaced that mini b for a micro Feb 14 12:24:26 iirc making it unsafe to connect the Green via usb to a computer if it's simultaneously being powered via the P9 header (which some capes do e.g. if they need more power than the BBB can provide) Feb 14 12:24:46 well no they replaced mini-usb by micro-usb and removed the barrel jack without replacing it by anything Feb 14 12:35:33 p9 headder? Feb 14 12:37:51 when loadded off the flash storage, what does the sd card do? Feb 14 12:38:30 just sits there Feb 14 12:38:47 can mount it as additional storage Feb 14 12:39:45 fill it with videos to play for a digital signage display Feb 14 12:40:26 Is there a way to see how much storage is used? Feb 14 12:40:32 df -h Feb 14 12:41:08 get a really big sd card and download wikipedia onto it, for offline use Feb 14 12:41:41 thats actualy not a bad idea Feb 14 12:41:50 i currently have a 32gb card for it Feb 14 12:41:56 need to formaat it Feb 14 12:43:17 also beware that it will prefer to boot from sd card over booting from eMMC if a bootable sd card is present Feb 14 12:47:20 what makes the sd card bootable Feb 14 12:48:42 leprachauns Feb 14 12:49:00 Space Magic Feb 14 12:49:50 the Power of Friendship Feb 14 12:50:00 actually not 100% sure, the bootloader just needs to find a linux filesystem with the right ingredients Feb 14 12:52:19 depends on what exactly is in the boot script of the bootloader (u-boot) installed on eMMC Feb 14 12:54:15 ok lets have a peek inside the uboot script Feb 14 12:54:32 where would i find it Feb 14 12:55:27 probably easiest way would be to connect a serial cable to the debug console, interrupt boot and type "printenv" Feb 14 12:55:51 _always_ start by connecting the serial console Feb 14 12:55:53 that would be the easiest if i had one Feb 14 12:55:53 of course it will also depend on which u-boot version you have Feb 14 12:56:14 it might be possible to extract the default env directly from the u-boot img Feb 14 12:56:14 does that Green business not present a serial port via usb? Feb 14 12:56:33 grogdor: what it presents via usb is entirely up to software and does not depend on hardware variant Feb 14 12:56:55 i see the debug connector Feb 14 12:56:59 the usb serial port is useless for this application though Feb 14 12:57:21 (since it doesn't exist until linux is running) Feb 14 12:57:39 anyway, why the curiosity about this? Feb 14 12:58:01 digging through the u-boot boot script is fairly tedious (I speak from experience) and the knowledge gained is of dubious value Feb 14 12:58:25 should be fine then Feb 14 12:59:25 does it auto mount the sd card? Feb 14 12:59:30 nope Feb 14 13:01:13 Ok, how do you mount it? i cant say i have mounted anything via the commandline before Feb 14 13:01:39 sudo mount /dev/mmcblk0p1 /path/to/mountpoin Feb 14 13:01:47 mountpoint must be existing empty directory Feb 14 13:02:04 /dev/mmcblk0 is sd card, p1 indicates partition 1 Feb 14 13:02:32 if you want to mount a filesystem that has no notion of ownership (e.g. FAT) you may want to add more options Feb 14 13:02:40 a nicer way is to add a line to /etc/fstab Feb 14 13:03:19 /dev/mmcblk0p1 /mnt/sd vfat users,uid=debian,gid=debian,fmask=0137,dmask=0027,noauto 0 0 Feb 14 13:03:35 no notion of ownership? what do you mean by that Feb 14 13:04:19 that would allow you to do "mount /mnt/sd" as normal user (no sudo) to mount a FAT-formatted SD card at /mnt/sd and allows user debian access to its contents Feb 14 13:04:34 as in, which user owns a file Feb 14 13:06:15 ok Feb 14 13:06:55 how are the users setup on this image? Feb 14 13:07:40 the default user "debian" is setup to have hopefully all privileges it needs for typical applications, including those that want to interact with the hardware (as is typical for beaglebone usage) Feb 14 13:08:00 it also has the right to sudo Feb 14 13:08:34 other than that there's just the standard system-users used by services (which are set up automatically) Feb 14 13:09:46 the only group that user "debian" ought to be in but isn't yet on the latest released image (fixed in the next release) is the "input" group for direct access to input devices (such as mice and keyboards), which can be fixed by doing "sudo adduser debian input" Feb 14 13:10:12 is there anyway to change the name? Feb 14 13:10:34 in theory yes but that might be tricky, the name is probably configured in a whole bunch of places Feb 14 13:10:46 better to create a new user if desired Feb 14 13:11:03 how would i do that with all the same privileges? Feb 14 13:13:09 yeah that would also be non-trivial... I suggest either accepting the default name (you can add an ssh config file on your host computer to make it automatically log in as "debian" so you don't have to type it each time) or adding a new user and being prepared to add/correct privileges as needed whenever you run into something it's not allowed to Feb 14 13:17:23 yea sounds like its more hassle then its worth to name the default user Porthos Feb 14 13:17:30 we named it . . . Feb 14 13:20:30 I generally start with a console image rather than the IoT image so there's less stuff to rename :P Feb 14 13:20:48 also I'm pretty comfortable with fixing permissions when needed Feb 14 13:22:08 sounds like a good idea Feb 14 13:22:38 my plans for it atm is something to mess around with. tbh i still dont know what it can be used for Feb 14 13:22:48 one of the plans was to run a ksp server off it for the heck of it Feb 14 13:23:15 could it be used as a NAS controler? Feb 14 13:23:32 a really bad one? sure Feb 14 13:24:01 like, that would rely mostly on the weakest points of the BBB while not utilizing any of its strengths Feb 14 13:24:51 Seeed has a cool catalog of sensors and stuff Feb 14 13:24:51 yea i cant see it doing it well Feb 14 13:25:02 plenty of bbb and rpi projects for inspiration Feb 14 13:25:26 if you want an example of something a BBB can do that you can completely forget about on something like an RPi, look at BeagleLogic which turns a beaglebone into a 12-channel 100 Msps logic analyzer Feb 14 13:25:49 grogdor: pretty sure it also runs on the original beaglebone :) Feb 14 13:26:25 this would be the mount command right Feb 14 13:26:28 "sudo Mount /dev/mmcblk0p1 /mnt/sd vfat users,uid=debian,gid=debian,fmask=0137,dmask=0027,noauto 0 0" Feb 14 13:26:32 Sora231: no Feb 14 13:26:42 Sora231: that was an example line for /etc/fstab Feb 14 13:26:58 (also, "mount" is lowercase) Feb 14 13:27:44 if you add that line (without the "sudo mount") to /etc/fstab then you can just do "mount /mnt/sd" (no need for sudo) Feb 14 13:28:04 that assumes the SD card is FAT-formatted and /mnt/sd exists as empty directory Feb 14 13:28:51 i think its fat32 formatted Feb 14 13:29:03 yeah which fat-variant doesn't matter Feb 14 13:29:07 ok Feb 14 13:29:09 as long as it's not exFAT Feb 14 13:30:23 (Windows will format SD cards that are 32GB or above as exFAT, which linux doesn't support, but you can just reformat them as fat32 on linux (or on windows using third-party tools) and windows will understand it just fine) Feb 14 13:31:03 Wait linux doesnt support exFAT? Feb 14 13:31:42 no, exFAT is patent-encumbered Feb 14 13:32:01 you can make it go with fuse Feb 14 13:32:40 microsoft only recently licensed the patents in a liberal way, so linux added exFAT support in kernel 5.4 Feb 14 13:33:15 and like grogdor said there's also a userspace (FUSE) driver for it Feb 14 13:37:21 can i make my own image? Feb 14 13:37:38 how are we supposed to know your abilities? :P Feb 14 13:38:43 good point Feb 15 00:37:16 I made it to beagleboard.org tweets! Feb 15 00:37:28 Did you see the tweet? Feb 15 00:37:49 Cool, heh? I feel like doing something positive is good for others to learn from currently. Feb 15 00:38:41 So, if anyone has questions, they can do it and the proof is in the instructions from the eewiki and the post w/ photo! Feb 15 00:38:53 Should I add video? Feb 15 00:42:56 Yes. I should! Feb 15 00:44:27 Something happened. They kicked out my photo and other info. Feb 15 00:44:44 I just researched my work. Oh well. Back to the grind. Feb 15 01:13:57 tweet wasn't it Feb 15 01:20:13 Oh? Feb 15 01:20:23 Look at the video on the hackster.io link! Feb 15 01:20:33 I speak and show myself in thermal! Feb 15 01:21:07 I look hot! Feb 15 01:21:09 Ha. Feb 15 01:35:25 Anyway...I have been trying to learn about how to use OpenCV to detect color gradients in pixels to account for color changes in the video camera on the feed. It is not as plain-Jane as it seems. Feb 15 01:37:09 One thing I see is that accounting for pixel gradients is going to get me my heat values, arbitrary values for now, and then I can find the value of heat in my face, the BBAI, and other things in general. Feb 15 01:42:18 But... Feb 15 01:42:41 I do not know how to account for OpenCV using a SPI device as a camera just yet. Feb 15 01:48:03 SPI camera? Feb 15 01:49:53 digikey has two BBB's for same, one from seed studio and one from ghi electronics Feb 15 01:50:00 https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/BBB01-SC-505/BBB01-SC-505-ND/6210999?itemSeq=354564104 Feb 15 01:50:21 https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/102110420/2820-102110420-ND/12719590?itemSeq=354563789 Feb 15 01:50:43 the second link is the one from seed studio and is cheaper Feb 15 01:55:09 Yep. Feb 15 01:55:24 so they are the same then? Feb 15 01:55:27 ds2: SPI camera. Feb 15 01:55:35 FLIR> Feb 15 01:57:24 CCFL_Man: I think the two have different mfg. only but there is no way to tell unless you research the differences. Feb 15 01:58:24 both should work the same? Feb 15 01:59:01 Oh. Feb 15 01:59:07 Yes. Both work. Feb 15 01:59:13 Both should work the same. Feb 15 01:59:17 Is one a BBG? Feb 15 01:59:33 no, both say BBB Feb 15 02:00:00 I did not even know the BBB was made by GHI. Feb 15 02:00:43 Nice. Feb 15 02:00:49 they were originally made by seed studio, right? Feb 15 02:00:53 GHI makes Capes too. Feb 15 02:01:08 oh. No...I do not believe so. Feb 15 02:01:23 I think something Circuit Co. or something. Feb 15 02:01:32 Let me look it up. Feb 15 02:01:42 the link on the main page gives you the opne made by GHI Feb 15 02:01:50 rev c Feb 15 02:02:42 Right. That is the final revision. Feb 15 02:02:53 Rev. C is the final rev. for what i know. Feb 15 02:03:04 ahh Feb 15 02:03:07 But that is for the BBB only. Feb 15 02:03:16 right Feb 15 02:06:54 The other boards have WiFi, i.e. BBBW, BBGW (beware of issues), and BBAI. Oh and the BBBlue. Feb 15 02:07:12 Anyway, I need food! Food time! Feb 15 02:07:48 brb Feb 15 02:39:20 Okay. Sorry. So, what did you figure out? Feb 15 02:41:33 So the issues w/ the BBGW are only related to wifi taking over some pin usage. Feb 15 02:41:54 Well, that and BT. Feb 15 02:42:36 ds2: So, the SPI device is only for the LCD display from the camera? Feb 15 02:42:53 and not due to...oh. Feb 15 02:43:16 I must have configured things so many times, i never really thought about it. Feb 15 02:43:35 Hmm. Feb 15 02:44:31 I got it now. SPI devices, in this instance, are for feeding the LCD info. from what the chip and FLIR on the module. Feb 15 02:45:02 Sorry. That makes no sense. Feb 15 02:45:37 I got it now. SPI devices, in this instance, are for feeding the LCD info. from what the chip and FLIR on the module are computing. Feb 15 02:45:38 There. **** ENDING LOGGING AT Mon Feb 15 02:59:58 2021