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Over the years I've authored several Open Source (usually under the
GPL) projects during the many years I worked for
Cygnus Solutions (now part of RedHat) and as "side" projects for the
Free Software Foundation when
working elsewhere on "commercial" applications.
I am 17+ year developer & supporter of Open Source Software from long
before it was a fad. Software I've authored is on all the Linux CD
distributions shipped today. Here is a brief list of the major Open
Source Projects projects on which I have worked on.
Current Projects
- NASA
- I've somehow found myself drafted to work on the "Center-TRACON
Automation System, or CTAS", which is a set of tools designed to help air
traffic controllers manage the increasingly complex air traffic flows
at large airports. I ported it to Linux. :-) (and then HPUX 11, and
Solaris 2.6). Since then I've built a few clusters, and help NASA/FAA
with custom GNU/Linux and GCC support for a variety of processors.
- Gnash Flash Movie Player
- Gnash is a GPL'd Flash player and Firefox plugin, based on GameSWF. Gnash
is currently under heavy development as it's a new project. More
developers and funding. Here's an articlet that came out on 01/09/06 about Gnash.
- GameSWF Flash Movie Player
- I've joined the GameSWF project to write a free Flash movie
player for Linux/Darwin/Windows. I took the original code base and
brought it up to a much more fully functional system that support the
latest Flash format version 7. Since you can send XML messages
to the movie player which is parses, it lets you use a Flash movie as
the main GUI for an application, perfect for a small embedded system.
- Solar Powered, Wireless Phone System
- I've added a long-range, wireless phone system to my off-grid
house and lab. The landline end of this wireless connection is also
off the grid. This is a more detail version of an article that was in
Home Power magazine in issue
#88.
- AbelMon
- As part of why I'm building my own Solar lab, is I've been busy
working on a Linux based power management system for off-grid
houses. This is a huge project which recently I've broken into several
smaller standalone pieces.
- GnuAE
- It was brought to my attention that people need good design
software for off-grid houses and other projects than they currently
need power-management. So I created GnuAE to address this
problem. This is a GTK/GNOME compliant application that helps with
sizing and design issues, then calculates the equipment needed to
support these uses, as well as all the NEC compliant wiring.
- PowerGuru
- This project was part of Abelmon till recently, and was called
TraceGUI. Well, Trace is now owned by Xantrex, and I also addd an Outback MX 60
charge controller recently, so I've rewritten this to be a standalone
project that support both Outback
Power Systems and Xantrex products.
- Solar Lab
- I'm currently building a state of the art, alternate energy lab at
my off grid geodesic domes near Ward. This
is where I plan to develop a several products in the alternate energy
field. While I know there are many excellent engineers in this field,
I don't think most are looking at the whole system design. My goal is
to be able to do my own research that will hopefully lead to improved
designs. Towards that goal, I've been rewiring the house, which is
documented here. I
recently installed a new PV array on the roof of the lab. More details
are in this article
- DejaGnu
- DejaGnu is a framework for testing other programs. Think of it as
a custom library of Tcl procedures crafted to support writing a test
harness. DejaGnu is heavily used by many GNU projects, companies, and
universities because it is the only testing tool designed from the
beginning to work with embedded targets and remote hosts. Also because
I was a member of the X/Open POSIX standards committee on Testing
Methodologies, DejaGnu is one of 2 POSIX conforming testing tools in
the world.
- Request Multimedia
- I'm working with a Troy, NY company that builds a really nice
digital MP3/FLAC jukebox designed as a high-end stereo component. It
scans CDs, tapes, whatever, or can download music from the Net over
it's ethernet connection. Their new product runs embedded Linux.
Previous Projects
- Interact TV
- I'm was consulting to a Boulder (now Westminster) based company
doing an Open Source, embedded Linux based Interactive TV product. As
a person that hasn't owned a TV in 20 years, I think an Open Source,
Linux based, settop box built more like a multimedia PC would be a a
great idea. Too bad they don't pay their invoices...
- Linux on HP Omnibook 6100s
- I somehow would up installing and maintaining Linux on some HP
Omnibook 6100 laptops a customer is using. This document is on how to
make this laptop a dual boot laptop with full device support. Note:
the latest Fedora Core 2 or 3 runs out of the box on the Omnibook
6100.
- NILO
- NILO is the Network Interface Loader. NILO will boot Linux,
FreeBSD, and Windows 95/98/NT4. It also supports the Intel PXE
standard, and is suitable for burning into ROM. Most of this project
has been migrated to the Etherboot and OSKit projects, and hence
doesn't exist as a standalone project anymore.
- eCOS
- eCOS is a highly configurable, hard real-time Operating System
that runs on a variety of processors, and is tighly integrated into
the GNU development tools. I was the original architect of eCOS, and
helped create the development team that brought this product to market
in under a year.
- Libgloss
- Libgloss is a Board Support Package for the GNU tools. This
includes startup code and minimum I/O support for a large collection
of manufacturer's evaluation boards. It also contains working GDB
stubs for a number of targets. These days it is distributed with the
Newlib releases, Cygnus's (RedHat's) embedded C library for use in non
eCOS environments.
- GDB
- GDB, the GNU debugger, allows you to debug programs written in C,
C++, Java, and other languages, by executing them in a controlled fashion,
printing their data, etc., on a wide variety of UNIX and non-UNIX
systems. I added several features to GDB, all oriented towards
cross debugging of embedded systems. These features include the ROM
monitor interface, several embedded GDB stubs, and an unreleased
multi-protocol backend for GDB that used CORBA for network access.
- GCC
- GCC is the name for the GNU compiler. It currently
supports C, C++, assembler, Fortran IV, Java, Ada, and Pascal. It
works either as a native compiler for most operating systems, or as a
cross compiler for many embedded microprocessors. I worked heavily on
adding the cross development abilities to GCC, as well as other tweaks
so it could be used for embedded systems development.
- Tcl/TK
- Tcl (Tool Command Language) is the industry's first scripting
language capable of handling enterprise-scale integration tasks. It's
used by over half a million developers worldwide and has become a
critical component in thousands of corporations. It has a simple and
programmable syntax and can be either used as a standalone application
or embedded in application programs. I was one of the Tcl maintainers
for many years, as it is used by my DejaGnu program.
- Expect
- Expect is a tool for automating interactive applications such as
telnet, ftp, passwd, fsck, rlogin, tip, etc. Expect really makes this
stuff trivial. Expect is also useful for testing these same
applications. And by adding Tk, you can also wrap interactive
applications in X11 GUIs. I was also one of the Expect maintainers
for many years, as it is used by my DejaGnu program.
- Cygwin
- The Cygwin tools are ports of the popular GNU development tools
and utilities for Windows 95, 98, and NT. They function by using the
Cygwin library which provides a UNIX-like API on top of the Win32
based systems (win95, win98, NT). I was an original member of the
GNUish project in the 1980s porting GNU software to DOS, Xenix, and
WinDoze. We then later ported a large chunk of Linux to win32, which
finally became the Cygwin project.
I also have years of experience in the infrastructure of the
Internet. More than just a fancy web site designer (which I'm not), my
specialty is the in the guts of the Internet. Some of my websites are
the oldest on the Net. (created in 1993) I have experience in the
web servers, intranet creation, firewalls, and internet security.
Commerical applications I've worked were all mostly embedded or
industrial projects. Needless to say, none of these companies exist
anymore... Past projects include:
- Cygnus
- I was one of the original staff of
Cygnus (now part of RedHat. Originally we were Cygnus
Support, but later some fancy marketing people thought Cygnus
Solutions sounds better...
- RIPS
- I was the Sr. Advanced Products development person, building what
was the world's first RISC based color laser printer. I spent most of
my time doing R&D, and authored 2 ROM debug monitors, and ported the
Nucleus RTOS to the MIPS architecture.
- Technistar
- Technistar was a systems integrator in the Robotics/Automation
field. There I designed and built large robotic & machine vision
systems. The one project I did (other than some disk drive machines)
that most people approve of was a new Reese's Peanut Butter Cup
machine for Hershey Chocolate, and some packaging lines for Giradelli
Chocolate.
- Topologix
- At Topologix I was the Sr. Software Architect on their
supercluster, massively parallel machines. Among other things, I wrote
the initial message passing based operating system, and managed the
design and implementation of our parallelized versions of C, Fortran
77, and Common LISP.
- Laser Applications
- I was head of the computer group building custom CAD/CAM software
and customer applications for high-precision Laser Machining.
I am available for seminars, training, consulting, or product
development. Please contact me by email, or by calling me
303-258-0506.
Media Coverage
- Cisco Ad
- I've long had a Cisco 2000 router for my net connection, which has
survived almost 8 years of what passes for electrical power around
here. So when they asked me to do an ad, I thought I'd return the
favor. This was published during April, 1999 in Japanese newspapers, so
it's a touch out of date.
- Interactive Week
- I got interviewed by Interactive Week for an article on Open
Source programmers. Three of us were featured in the interviews.
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