New on RIPE Labs: Results of the IoT Hackathon
Dear colleagues, The tenth RIPE NCC hackathon took place just before RIPE 79. Four teams of community members worked on a number interesting projects related to the Internet of Things (IoT) and came up with some great results. Check out the findings on RIPE Labs: https://labs.ripe.net/Members/becha/results-of-the-first-iot-hackathon Kind regards, Mirjam Kühne RIPE NCC
On 2019-11-11 7:24 p.m., Mirjam Kuehne wrote:
Dear colleagues,
The tenth RIPE NCC hackathon took place just before RIPE 79. Four teams of community members worked on a number interesting projects related to the Internet of Things (IoT) and came up with some great results. Check out the findings on RIPE Labs:
https://labs.ripe.net/Members/becha/results-of-the-first-iot-hackathon
I will be working on the Aethernauts team WIFI detector at the IETF106 Hackathon. I have made it work on ESP8266 (the version of the ESP SDK matters a bit, but also the method used to flash was wrong) I have made it compile with the Python code not monkey-patched into the micropython source tree; so this makes it much easier to manage. I haven't quite finished getting it all sorted out so my team partners haven't seen an email/pull-request from me yet... this week, before the Hackathon starts. I will be at the IoT-Onboarding/MUD "table", and I will be: 1) adding a MUD URL to the DHCPv4 code. 2) planning how to add BRSKI support; which parts can be python, which parts need to be C, and if the axtls library is able to support our needs, or if we have to move to mbedtls, and if that will fit in the devices. I don't expect to complete this work, but I think we will learn some things doing some experiments. Given time-zones for IETF106 at Singapore, if you want to participate remotely, you'll probably have to get up really early, or possibly stay up all night :-)
participants (2)
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Michael Richardson
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Mirjam Kuehne