On Sun May 26, 2002 at 07:31:36AM +0200, Robert Schwebel wrote:
> On Sat, May 25, 2002 at 06:48:53PM -0600, Erik Andersen wrote:
> > So now we have a full 3D model of the robot, the non-liner model
> > of the robot PID-gain space, the entire (application specific)
> > workcell model, the robot specific forward and inverse kinematics
> > routines, and the entire trajectory planning subsystem. And of
> > course we now need the real-time IO subsystem to handle are the
> > thousands of this-and-that sensors (think PLC-type behavior).
> > etc, etc, etc. All this in the kernel? Nah...
>
> People are doing this (or at least something similar) in reality these
> days... :-)
Oh I know they are. I was doing all of this stuff while in grad
school back in 1996, and later at my first job I was doing this
stuff too. Had to use LynxOS back then. Would have been nice if
we could have used Linux... I was watching RTLinux closely back
then -- long before the patent problem. :)
> Hopefully, your post shows clearly why there are users out there who don't
> want to make such complex algorithms open source, and I must say I can
> understand them.
That was the hope. So people would understand that this isn't
the type of application where you can just squirrel away the
real-time bits in a device driver... Its got to be the whole
thing,
-Erik
-- Erik B. Andersen http://codepoet-consulting.com/ --This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons-- - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
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