Arm9 module comes with smartphone-aware …
SSV announced a new member of its “DIL/NetPC” computer-on-module (COM) family, offering a web server designed for remote access via smartphones. the Linux-based DIL/NetPC DNP/9265 incorporates an ARM9 Atmel AT91SAM9263 processor with 32MB SDRAM, 32MB flash, Ethernet and other I/O, and is offered with an “SK30″ starter kit.Based on a long line of Linux-ready DIL/NetPC modules, such as the DIL/NetPC DNP/2486 computer-on-module (COM) announced in February 2009, the 2.17 x 0.91-inch DIL/NetPC DNP9265 shares the trademark "DIL" (dual in line) socket of its fellow modules, which enables attachment to custom I/O boards.
the new module appears to be an heir to SSV’s ADNP/9200, aimed at bridging various wireless networks with Ethernet LANs, which the German company introduced in late 2006,.
DIL/NetPC DNP/9265 (Click to enlarge) the DNP/9265 was developed for embedded HTTP(S) client and server gateway applications that need to connect to Ethernet-based TCP/IP networks, says SSV.
Its onboard web server is especially designed to offer content to browsers running on smartphones, the company adds. The DNP/9265 is also said to support SSV/ECC (SSV Embedded Cloud Computing) as an HTTP/HTTPS client. Announced in October in the form of two Linux-based DNP/2486-based development kits, the SSV/ECC stack offers access to Amazon’s S3 cloud services, and supports data logging, firmware updates, VPN-based remote access, and remote configuration applications.
Of course you need team input. You need a list of all the steps that must be done to complete the project - then you need to figure out what tasks need to be done before others can be done. Then you'd put times on each task. The team together should develop the list of tasks, the dependencies, and time estimates for each task. Then you'd need to decide who is going to do each task - be careful that one person doesn't have 300 hours of work to do in one week. After you have all of this put together, it falls into a timeline, which is basically a schedule. The timeline will show both start dates and end dates.
I fail to see a question here...
episode 18