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Viptos 5.1-alpha
Elaine Cheong, Christopher Brooks, Edward A. Lee

Citation
Elaine Cheong, Christopher Brooks, Edward A. Lee. "Viptos 5.1-alpha". UC Berkeley, 1, November, 2005.

Abstract
Viptos is an interface between TinyOS and Ptolemy II. TinyOS is an event-driven operating system designed for sensor network nodes that have very limited resources (e.g., 8K bytes of program memory, 512 bytes of RAM). TinyOS, is used, for example, on the Berkeley MICA motes, which are small wireless sensor nodes. The Viptos5.1-alpha release is a source only release that works under Linux only. Under Windows, Viptos will not run TinyOS models, though the models are viewable.

Electronic downloads

Citation formats  
  • HTML
    Elaine Cheong, Christopher Brooks, Edward A. Lee. <a
    href="http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/pubs/49.html"
    ><i>Viptos 5.1-alpha</i></a>, UC
    Berkeley, 1, November, 2005.
  • Plain text
    Elaine Cheong, Christopher Brooks, Edward A. Lee.
    "Viptos 5.1-alpha". UC Berkeley, 1, November, 2005.
  • BibTeX
    @software{CheongBrooksLee05_Viptos51alpha,
        author = {Elaine Cheong and Christopher Brooks and Edward A.
                  Lee},
        title = {Viptos 5.1-alpha},
        institution = {UC Berkeley},
        day = {1},
        month = {November},
        year = {2005},
        abstract = {Viptos is an interface between TinyOS and Ptolemy
                  II. TinyOS is an event-driven operating system
                  designed for sensor network nodes that have very
                  limited resources (e.g., 8K bytes of program
                  memory, 512 bytes of RAM). TinyOS, is used, for
                  example, on the Berkeley MICA motes, which are
                  small wireless sensor nodes. The Viptos5.1-alpha
                  release is a source only release that works under
                  Linux only. Under Windows, Viptos will not run
                  TinyOS models, though the models are viewable.},
        URL = {http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/pubs/49.html}
    }
    

Posted by Christopher Brooks on 4 May 2006.
Groups: ptolemy
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