The Paparazzi team have released a new IMU board called Asprin. It's just the accelerometers, gyros and magnetometer sensors (no processor) and is available for $110 at Joby Robotics.
Strangely, I can't find any mention of it being open source. Is it actually possible that Paparazzi is no longer supporting open source hardware? That would be sad if true. They seem to have deleted the Hardware folder from their repository. [Correction: the hardware repository is here. It only has the schematic of Lisa (no board file) and no files at all for Asprin]. I've asked for clarification, but haven't heard back yet.
Remember that Paparazzi's tagline is "Bringing freedom to UAV since 2003". Maybe it should be "Bringing freedom to UAVs, 2003-2010" ;-)
[UPDATE: The official statement: "For the time being the Eagle files for Aspirin are not released in a OSHW definition compatible way. We at Joby Robotics would love to be able to release the files. But we don’t feel comfortable with that at the moment. It is a continuing discussion here at Joby Robotics, so let’s hope for the best!
P.S. Aspirin is not a “Paparazzi” design as such, it was developed at Joby Robotics with close collaboration with Paparazzi community. It may have not been reflected by the article properly for some readers."]
[UPDATE2: On March 3rd, the Joby team did decide to release the files and open source the boards. Lisa is here and Asprin is here. Good news!]
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Comments
So, can someone please lead me to a link so that i can reach to the control algorithm of Lisa (especially for adaptive control) ? I am building a quadrotor and want to work on a working code for adaptive control.
Thank you.
Thanks guys for mentioning my FreeIMU project. FreeIMU is a truly libre hardware project, released under CC-BY-SA and even developed with KiCAD, a libre PCB editing software, so that you don't have to rely on proprietary software to study or modify its designs.
For all the informations about FreeIMU, its design sources, Gerbers and BOM see the project page at
http://www.varesano.net/projects/hardware/FreeIMU
Thank you.
Chris--that's great news! Many thanks for the news.
For those confused by the above, it looks like the Paparazzi team has now open sourced the Lisa and Asprin hardware.
The final word?
http://svn.sv.gnu.org/viewvc/?view=rev&root=paparazzi&revis...
http://svn.sv.gnu.org/viewvc/?view=rev&root=paparazzi&revis...
Thanks a lot :)
Chris,
I am happy to go with the summary Felix has posted. However please correct this factual inaccuracy:
The post you point to was not made by me.
I would like to add that I understand the confusion.
Over time, various people were contributing to the project, some of them stayed longer that others. And that is many people since 2003. I don't quite know the new people. Also, there were some companies that tried to make money on the hardware. Again, some of them succeeded, some didn't. Most of the people who worked in these companies tried to honestly contribute to the project. Quite naturally, term "Paparazzi project" is sometimes used for marketing.
Now, we just need to carefully separate those. Hehe, I guess DIYDrones will be there too. And yes, Paparazzi project is open soft-hardware.
To me, Paparazzi project is always Antoine Drouin and Pascal Brisset.
Chris, I think it was not a nice gesture to imply that Paparazzi is going closed source and it is simply not true.
But Chris has a valid point: Unfortunately Lisa and Aspirin hw files are currently not available under an open license.
Maybe some of the confusion is coming from the Paparazzi blog where some of us Paparazzi developers try to inform about ongoing work. This includes Piotr who is currently working at JobyRobotics. I guess it should have been made more clear!
So please stop knocking each others heads in and let's not spill any bad blood over this! It is totally unnecessary and doesn't do any good for anyone.
I strongly believe in openness and I'm convinced that we can all work together to do fun and amazing things!
It is just way cheaper and less error prone for everyone than if lots of people make them in small batches and probably resulting in boards with small differences and bugs that get harder to support. As a lot of people probably know, manufacturing hw is something you want to get right!
While I can't really speak for JobyRobotics, I know some of the guys there are big proponents of Open Hardware in general and have released quite a few Open Hardware designs themselves.
Personally I hope that they will do so in the future, but that is their decision and should be respected!
But right now I really see this from a practical standpoint:
* I don't need to make any changes to the boards.
* It's to expensive for me to manufacture two or three boards for myself anyway.
* All the software is open and I have everything I need to work with it (schematics)!
* Better documentation, etc. for this is on the way, but there are only so many hours in a day...
If you are unhappy with that you can always start designing and contributing boards under an open license.